MACASKILL, FRED, In Search of Liberty, extract on monetary freedom, from this book, with some advertisements for the publisher, BOOKS IN FOCUS, 8pp, 29x, in PP 905. One of the many books that I have not reproduced because of copyrights restrictions. – J.Z.

MACGOOHAN, PATRICK, The Prisoner, Review, Different Values, by Chris Tame, in PP 696.

MACGREGOR, ISLA & MARTIN, BRIAN & PHILLIPS, SHIRLEY, Suppression of intellectual dissent: what it is and what to do about it, August 93, 2pp leaflet, picked in 1995 Visions of Freedom conference, in Sydney, in PP 1323: 58.

MACHAN, TIBOR R., The Ethics of Gradualism, 1987, 2pp, LA Tactical Notes No. 5, in PP 1,052 – 1,061. I wish authors like Tibor Machan, Murray Rothbard et al, whom I respect much, would bother to get their collected works, and papers, so far produced, completely and cheaply accessible on microfiche. Why should they only appear years or may be decades after their death, in expensive paper editions, which many could not afford? E.g. reprints of the Works of Spencer and Sumner cost ca. $1200 – 1300. On fiche they could probably offer their works now, for $ 50 or less. And they could have them scanned and automatically indexed, too. Most of their correspondence should also be made so available, before they die, to make it more affective, whilst they are still living. Potentially, their market could increase tenfold or more by the price price reductions and by the availability of all of their written statements intended for publication or for which publicity is desired by them. – J.Z.

MACHAN, TIBOR R., The Ethics of Privatization, 4pp, in PP 1430/31: 163. – Surely, it is NOT right and ethical to hand over the sales proceeds to politicians and bureaucrats rather than to their victims! See PP 19 C. – J.Z.

MACHAN, TIBOR R., The Libertarian Alternative: Essays in Social and Political Philosophy, edited by T.M., review by RALPH RAICO, 1p: 61, in PP 1468.

MACHENRY, ALISTAIR, Masochism at Hyde Park, 1p, in PP 1420/22: 242. – Racism seems to be tolerated there IF it is directed against “white” people. – By the way, I have never met person who was truly “white” and even the darkest Negroes are not really black or close to black on some parts of their bodies. Anyhow, I prefer e.g. a “blue” libertarian to a “white” statist. – J.Z.

MACHIAVELLI, NICK, HEW Plot Revealed. If I Were Secretary of HEW, 1p: 92, in PP 1498.

MACK, ERIC, In Defense of “Unbridled” Freedom of Contract, THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY 40, Jan. 81, 1-14. (An earlier version of this paper was presented at a symposium on Freedom of Contract, sponsored by the IHS & the Univ. of Dallas, 1978.), summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1203p1581, headed: Defending Freedom of Contract. – Were panarchistic contracts with optional governments, also discussed? – J.Z.

MACKAY GESELLSCHAFT, German Society, started by Kurt H. Zube (Solneman), 1905 – 1991. Uwe Timm’s revival attempt, 1p, in PP 1,051. (LMP tries only to get & keep its political and economic writings alive on fiche & to induce its former members to utilize this medium to publish much more than the Mackay Gesellschaft did. – J.Z.)

MACKAY GESELLSCHAFT, See: PP 156, 809, 811 (Ein Mensch der abhaengt…). See also the draft for a micrographic archivization, continuation and unlimited expansion of the work of this society, in German, in PP 811, 826.

MACKAY, JOHN HENRY, The Veil of Sagitta. Letters on the Nameless Love from J.H. Mackay to B.R. Tucker, introduced and edited by Hakim Bey, 9pp: 56, in PP 1505.

MACKAY, JOHN HENRY, Two Poets, 2pp, a short story: 60, in PP 1505.

MACKAY, THOMAS, A Plea for Liberty An Argument Against Socialism and Socialist Legislation, consisting of an introduction by Herbert Spencer and Essays by various Writers, ed. by Thomas Mackay, 2nd. ed., 1891, 414pp, 36x, PP 202.

MACKAY, THOMAS, A Policy of Free Exchange, Essays by various writers on the Economic and Social Aspects of Free Exchange and Kindred Subjects, 1894, 292pp, 29x, in PP 371.

MACKAY, THOMAS, An Apology for Liberty, 1908, 32pp, lecture before the British Constitution Association, in PP 975.

MACLEOD, DUNCAN, The Political Economy of John Taylor of Caroline, JOURNAL OF AMERICAN STUDIES 14, Dec. 80, 387-405, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1760, headed: John Taylor: Labor & Liberty.

MACLEOD, HENRY DUNNING, The Science of Economics and its Relation to Free Exchange and Socialism, 1894, 46pp, 29x, in PP 371.

MACLEOD, KEN, Libertarianism, the Loony Left and the Secrets of the Illuminati, 2pp, PERSONAL PERSPECTIVES No. 10: 79, in PP1516.

MAD COW DISEASE: Thatcher ministers “hid” mad cow threat, 1p, THE INDEPENDENT, THE GUARDIAN, THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD, 25 March 96. – The NSW Progress Party, in its latest newsletter, had just one body of evidence to offer against the supposed threat from ingesting meat contaminated with it, namely, the body of an English vegetarian, who died from the disease. But there are very few diseases which have only one way to travel from one to another. – Since the politicians manage to hide their own madness pretty well from most voters, we should not be surprised about this cover-up, either. – J.Z., 4.12.96. – It seems to be a much greater threat than AIDS, to all meat eaters. Who is not infected yet? – J.Z.

MAD, Anarchistische Hefte, Nr. 3, undatiert, 28 S.: 90, in PP 1499. – The authors of this magazine had not yet overcome most Marxist prejudices. – It is a sample of the kind of “anarchist”, or, rather, “egalitarian” publications that I dislike. – J.Z.

MADDEN, CARL H., The Evolution of the Concepts of Land Ownership, 13pp, in PP 1216.

MADDOCK, K., Contracts between Anarchists, 6pp: 466, in PP 1484/85.

MADDOCK, K., The Mystery of Kropotkin and Radcliffe-Brown, 8pp: 727, in PP 1484/85.

MADDOCK, K., Through Kropotkin to the Foundation of Radcliffe-Brown’s Anthropology, 8pp: 763, in PP 1484/85.

MADISON REPORT, THE, March/April 1990, Vol. 4, No. 2. The newsletter of the Madison Group, an association of ca. 60 free-market think tanks conducting state and local policy research, 34pp, with literature list and directory, in PP 1107. Even between them they have not yet discovered and used the potential benefits and economics of micrographics for themselves. So, how thorough is their combined research for liberty options? – J.Z.

MAGAZINES FOR THE FREE EXCHANGE OF OPINIONS, 1962 9pp, in PP 60-63 & 399/400. This was written for print on paper. Micrographics offers almost unlimited options in this sphere. – J.Z.

MAGAZINES FOR THE TIMELY AND SUFFICIENT ANNOUNCEMENT OF ALL LECTURE AND DISCUSSION EVENTS IN A CITY AT WHICH GUESTS ARE WELCOME, PP 61-63. (I did produce a few trial issues for Sydney and may film them one day, as samples of what could and should be done in this sphere. Perhaps someone will provide such a journal for the first city, on fiche, and on disk and on line? – J.Z.)

MAIL DELIVERIES: 5 or 6 per day, long ago, in London: 125, in PP 1476. – Hint from SMH, Dec. 13, 1997. Since then transport has become much faster, the sorting is largely computerized and the mail has become much more expensive, slower and uncertain. Telegrams have been completely discontinued. Nevertheless, the letter mail monopoly is still upheld. At least there are FAX and e-mail options now. But do we really have to wait for technological developments, over generations, to push back or destroy such monopolies? – I wish I had all the money by which the P.O.s overcharged me over competitive market prices. Nor do I get a price reduction for having to pick up my mail at the P.O. and having to mail it there. I had to wait for about 20 years for a P.O. Box and got it only because it had become a contract post office, concerned with making a buck. Would a referendum uphold the postal monopoly? – J.Z.

MALATESTA, ERRICO, Fra Contadini, 53pp, Rome, n.d.: 97, in PP 1492. – Whatever may not have been printed well enough in the previously fiched edition, in PP 1250, may be more legible here. But I offer no guaranty. – J.Z.

MALLOCK, W.H., A Missing Science, SOCIAL EQUALITY. A Short Study in a Missing Science, 2nd. ed., 1882, 276pp: 255-322, in PP1466/67.

MALLOCK, W.H., Amateur Christianity: 94, in PP 1499.

MALLOCK, W.H., Cowardly Agnosticism: 48, in PP 1499.

MALLOCK, W.H., Fabian Economics: I. What does Socialism mean? 232; II. Socialism as presented to us by its Intellectual Leaders: 235; III. Socialism, a distinctive Analysis of the Present, & an Historic Theory of the Past: 244; IV. The Fundamental Error in the Socialistic Analysis: 245, in PP 1499.

MALLOCK, W.H., Labour and the Popular Welfare, new edition, 1894, 376pp: 1, in PP 1476.

MALLOCK, W.H., Marriage and Free Thought: 139, in PP 1499.

MALLOCK, W.H., Property and Progress or A Brief Enquiry into Contemporary Social Agitation in England, 1884, 260pp, in PP 1169. Compare the book by Preuss, in PP 790, which likewise criticizes Henry George extensively.

MALLOCK, W.H., The So-Called Evolution of Socialism: I. Socialists on the Evolution of Socialism: 274; II. The alleged contemporary Evolution of Socialism an Appearance only, not a Reality: 278; III. Misconception by the Socialists of the Nature of Industrial Evolution generally: 286; IV. The True Significance of Contemporary Industrial Evolution: 295, in PP 1499.

MALLORY, GREG, The Industrial Workers of the World, 12pp: 828, in PP 1484/85.

MALSBERGER, JOHN W., The Political Thought of Fisher Ames, JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC 2, Spring 82, 1-20, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1880, headed: Rival Notions of Republicanism.

MALTBY, BRIAN & VERONICA, ROSZAK, THEODORE, Unilateral Nuclear Disarmament because of the Absurdity and Madness of the Nuclear Deterrent Policy, 7pp, with comments by John Zube, 1966, 24x, in PP 6.

MAN IN THE STREET, A, The Common Sense of Free Trade, 1903, 8pp, 29x, in PP 568.

Man Too Busy to Write One, n.d., 45pp, in PP 1541/42: 299. – In reply to CAPLAN, BRYAN. A more complete, much longer and later version can be found in PP 1543 – 1545. – Most anarchists are more prepared to try to spread their own errors than to learn about them. – J.Z.

MAN vs. THE STATE, PP 204.

MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY, PP 1150. See Individual Secessionism, On Panarchy, Exterritorial Autonomy, Personal Law, Cosmopolitan Union, Statelessness, etc. Perhaps it would be better to speak of a cosmopolitan or a man of all countries? – J.Z.

MANES, ALFRED, Prof., STAATSBANKROTTE, wirtschaftliche und rechtliche Betrachtungen, 1918, 3, Auflage, 1922, 290 S., 29x, in PP 635. – The only special study of State bankruptcies that I know of. Was highly recommended by Ulrich von Beckerath. It is so little known that it is rarely referred to in any writings on this subject. On how to expropriate the remaining assets of the bureaucracy, while repudiating “investments in tax slaves” and transferring securities for these assets to the citizens or taxpayers, see: PP 19 C. – J.Z.

MANGER, PHIL, Government by Slander, 3pp: 254, in PP 1457/62. – Slander is here defined as a “malicious, false, and defamatory statement or report.”

MANHATTAN REPORT

MANHATTAN REPORT On Economic Policy, some samples: I/1, 3/81; I/3, 5/81; I/7, 10/81; I/8, 11/81; II/4, 7/82; II/6, 8/82; III/1, 1/83; 96pp, in PP 1538: 1 – 96. – Published by ICEPS: International Center For Economic Policy Studies, N.Y.C. When I visited their N.Y.C. office, back in 1990, their library was not accessible to visitors. – Their staff showed the usual disinterest of organization people in what other freedom lovers were doing. Their organization was their universe or their pay cheque. But some of their publications are fine. – J.Z.

MANIS, ROD, The Government should STOP PLAYING POST OFFICE, an article in Pine Tree, 24x, in PP 176.

MANN, ERNEST, A Brave and Beautiful Future Could Start Now! 18pp, in REVOLUTION, in PP 1170. (Rather, a stupid and primitive society, based on his price-less “economy”! J.Z.)

MANN, FREDERIC, Terra Libra, 2pp introduction to IDENICS, in PP 1216.

MANN, FREDERICK, Dear Esteemed T.L. Customer, Aug. 15,95, 2pp; How to Build a Fortune in 6-12 months, 6pp; Co-op Advertising, 2pp; Program P, 2pp; How I Increased Terra Libra’s Revenue, 4pp; How to Revolutionize Your Life, 8pp; in PP 1359. I have not heard of them lately. Is it still active? I was told that Mann himself got sick of T.L. going off into x directions at once and that he wanted to take his educational message on-line. I did not find his “get rich quick” schemes very educational. – J.Z.

MANN, FREDERICK, Free America Institute, 2pp, in PP 1318/1319:75.

MANN, FREDERICK, Free America Institute, letter of Oct. 15, 92, 1p, with a 2pp description of the Institute and a 4pp reply by John Zube, 2 Nov. 92, in PP 1,041.

MANN, FREDERICK, How to Create a Libertarian America – and Profit from your Efforts, 5pp, in PP 1252.

MANN, FREDERICK, Individual Free – Market Economic Power is the Greatest Liberating Force on Earth, Nov. 94, 3pp. – Many had and have this power – but did little for liberty. While they can make their personal lives more pleasant and comfortable, in order to acquire and maintain their riches, they had also to pay greatly in leisure and energy – and that often kept them from enlightening themselves and others as much as they otherwise could have. They, too, are in a particular but largely self-chosen treadmill. How often have I heard: “I will really do something for liberty — once I get rich!” or: “…once I am retired.” – Whether they become rich or not, after decades of such efforts, they are usually too pessimistic and exhausted for many and prolonged direct liberty efforts. – And if they have bought themselves more leisure, they all too often waste it almost exclusively on sensual pleasures and entertainments. Sensible and consistent freedom ideas are a much more important force – if properly organized, publicized and mobilized, than mere purchasing power. There is much purchasing power behind governmentalist ideas and propaganda – but it has not yet fully conquered the market and may never do so, no matter how poor its opponents are. – Throwing money at a problem can be a fallacy among freedom lovers, too. Undertaking prolonged labours of love CAN be more fruitful although, under present marketing conditions for freedom ideas, it will certainly not be so always or mostly. – J.Z.

MANUEL, BRUCE, Review of: Jonathan Schell: The Fate of the Earth, 2pp, 29x in PP 424. – The greatest verbal facility in describing the threat of nuclear war is not enough when not combined with rightful and correct ideas on how to effectively prevent it. See my PP 16-18 & 61-63. – J.Z.

MAO AS FREE ENTERPRISER? PP 1027.

MAPA, a project for an APA on Microfiche, that did not even reach its first fiche issue, 1p, 29x, in PP 710. A single periodical, using a new medium, new to most people, cannot expect to launch the medium and be successful immediately, as a periodical using this new medium. This is why LMP is so patiently assembling many titles on microfiche and is trying to list all libertarian interest titles offered by other publishers on microfilm. But this should not prevent small circles of information activists to produce much on fiche by each member and for the benefit of the other few members. “Wie fruchtbar ist der kleinste Kreis wenn man ihn wohl zu pflegen weiss” – sagte Schiller. (How fertile is the smallest circle, if it is well cared for!) Compare the MULTILOG project and see under BRAINSTORMING. At least this project induced Victor Koman to publish an introductory booklet to the microfiche option. See: Koman. – J.Z. 5/89. How can one raise awareness of all the freedom periodicals available now on microfilm and of the self-publishing options the medium offers potential publishers and editors of periodicals, who have, as usual, only very limited funds and circles of subscribers? My 1986 appeal to the libertarian press on this was in vain. – Most seem to think that they have already achieved all that can be when they manage to continue their periodical few pages for a few years. – All printed libertarian periodical should at least be willing and able to point out, in every issue: All our back issues are now available on microfiche and thus we are among the xyz libertarian journals already fully or partly available in this format. – But they seem to begrudge their microfiche options even this little effort. – J.Z. – Later Koman was involved with SOFTSERV, an attempt to popularize floppy disk use for publishing SF and libertarian texts. It flopped but K. became successful as a published (printed on paper) SF writer. Persistence with both alternative media was lacking. Some people insist on instant success and profit for the freedom struggle that has been going on for hundreds of years. – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MARGOLIS, JOSEPH, The Prospects of an Objective Morality, SOCIAL RESEARCH 46, Winter 79, 745-765, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1203p1288, headed: The Prospects of Objective Morality.

MARGOLIS, JOSEPH, The Rights of Man, SOCIAL THEORY AND PRACTICE 4, Spring 78, 423-444, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p685, headed: Is the Right to Freedom Vacuous?

MARGULIS, STEPHEN T., Conceptions of Privacy: Current Status and Next Steps, JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ISSUES 33, 1977, 5-21, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1200p391, headed: The Meaning of Privacy.

MARIEN, MICHAEL, The Challenge for Decentralists: Providing Alternatives for the Post-Industrial World, 5pp, in PP 1386/91: 612. – Industry or technology and world economics are not something to be overcome or avoided but, rather, to be utilized fully, in an individualistic way. – A post-industrial world is at best a poetic dream and at worst a nightmare. Many to most of us survive only because of industrialism. – Try to go into bush or deserts or mountains and survive there without tools and equipment, clothing & food stores, previously produced by industry. – J.Z.

MARIJUANA PETITION ORGANIZATION, 6pp leaflet, 29x, in PP 484.

MARIJUANA REPORT, THE, IX/1, Fall 1990, 4pp, in PP 1362/63: 29.

MARIJUANA, 4 pp of leaflets for the use of hemp – marijuana, in PP 1139.

MARIJUANA, PP 385, see DRUGS. – I would like to see a study to find out how effective or ineffective e.g. tobacco, alcohol and other drugs have been to turn freedom lovers off the freedom struggle – if these factors can be separated somehow the other influences. Have the abstainers been more persistent in their efforts? – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MARK, JEFFREY, The Modern Idolatry, being an Analysis of Usury & the Pathology of Debt, Libertarian Social Institute, Bombay, n.d., 239pp, 188-262, in PP 1447/49. – Piet Bouter selected, copied, cut & pasted (wastefully, by my standards) this title from my library. I would have postponed filming it indefinitely, being already deterred by the sub-title and every attempt at delving into the text. On every page I feel compelled to contradict the author. Not sharing the author’s and a still too wide-spread anti-interest bias, nor his ideas for monetary despotism, I do not consider this to be a libertarian book but rather one that harks back to the dogmas and prejudices of the Dark Ages. Alas, they are held also by still too many of the modern anarchists and libertarians and are thus, obviously, not yet sufficiently or widely enough refuted. Anyone who speaks of “free money” and then goes on to advocate central banking & legal tender, and attacks debt and interest, has really understood neither. His notions on money “creation” are those of “Social Credit”. He praises Major Douglas e.g. on pp 132/33, favours “money control” by the government on p 141 and legal tender on p. 142. Government debts “paid” by legal tender paper money issued against them: p. 198. On page 60 he seems to favour freedom of note issue but not of “credit creation”. Nor did I notice any discussion of sound and unsound tax foundation money. But at least on pages 213 & 214 he did defend the people who undertook barter and scrip experiments. On p. 214 he does not seem to understand that “independence of money” tokens can only be achieved via fully free clearing. To me it is one of the worst books on money that I have seen. If we can ever manage to automate, via a special computer program, the extraction of economic prejudices, then this book will probably turn out to be a treasure chest for them. As far as possible, their confrontation with the best refutations so far found should be automated, too. The recognition of the importance of money is not enough when not accompanied by enough right ideas on money. Does he anywhere sufficiently differentiate between voluntarily taken up debts and granted credits & their free payment and repayment arrangements, including agreed upon interest, and IMPOSED debts like taxes and government insecurities and the use of government insecurities as “backing” for the issue of government paper money? Does he distinguish between debts taken up for wasteful government projects or e.g. private gambling or drug use and debts to finance productive investments? To condemn all of them alike is simply absurd. Does he show any awareness that almost all due debts, of productive people, could be settled by clearing? He remains unaware that that debts tend to become a major problem mainly when the creditors are given the authority to demand scarce legal tender in repayment while, based on the laws of monetary despotism, refusing possible and desirable clearing arrangements, which most honest and capable debtors could provide, if free to do so and informed on how to do so best. Every exchange involves mutual debts. Instead of raving against debts and interests, he should have explored how everyone could be enabled to pay or clear his way without the provision of any supposedly “ideal” money provided by any government. How developed would our economies be if we did invest all our savings merely in jewellery and hoarded gold or silver coins and bullion? Having fiched this text – and some others – no one can any longer truthfully say that I do film only those texts that I do largely agree with. But I do hold that any discussion should be like a board game. It should introduce a continued discussion of a “game” that will be won. The idols worshipped by the author are much worse than those he attacks. – PIOT, J.Z., 27.11.1997.

MARKE, RON to ZUBE, JOHN, from The Rationalist Association of N.S.W., 17.11.85, 1p: 84, in PP 1496. – They, too, seem to be more concerned with copyrights than with getting their message out in full, cheaply and permanently. As for the last paragraph: People who got old and are sufficiently interested in reading in spite of an eye handicap, should know about and get themselves either proper reading glasses or a magnifying glass with a convenient holder for it. Alternatively, they can use an enlarging photocopier. Publishers are not the slaves of the readers. They do not have to supply any of them with the crutches they may require. People ought to be self-responsible. – J.Z.

MARKET & LIBERTY, PP 998.

MARKET & MONEY, PP 804. See Monetary Freedom.

MARKET & POLITICS, PP 1012.

MARKET ANARCHISM, See: KONKIN, SAMUEL EDWARD, III, Agorists = The Anti-Utopian Visionaries. A first introduction to the position of the Market- Anarchists, 2pp: 112, in PP 501.

MARKET FOR LIBERTY, LP of Oregon, newsletter, VIII/7, 7/78; VIII/8, 8/78, 9pp, in PP 274 & 275? (On my own I can’t keep up with all libertarian and anarchist periodicals. But a handful of freedom lovers could, and could share them, on cheap microfiche duplicates, with all others, permanently and cheaply, upon demand! – J.Z.)

MARKET MECHANISM OR PATERNALISTIC GOVERNMENT? PP 571.

MARKET MIRACLE, PP 310.

MARKET OR WELFARE STATE? PP 804.

MARKET POWER, See: WALKER, MICHAEL, The power of the market, 1p:28, in PP 1515.

MARRIAGE LAWS, See: MICKLETHWAIT, BRIAN, People – not the Government – Should Decide what Marriage Means, 96, 2pp, in PP 1334/35: 187. – Rather, each couple or group for itself! But they should be held to their responsibilities for their children! – J.Z., 30.9.97. – See K. MAYO, Mother India & Volume Two.

MARSHALL, PAUL, John Locke: Between God and Mammon, CANADIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE 12, March 79, 73-96, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p691, headed: Locke, Property, and Individualism.

MARTIN, BRIAN, Demarchy, a political alternative to electoral politics, 16pp, 16, in PP 1452. – I noticed too late that this version is only a draft, version 2 Dec. 1988, not intended for publication. When I get the final version then I will microfiche it, too. – J.Z.

MARTIN, BRIAN, DIMMER, CHRISTINE, REEVES, NOELINE & SULLIVAN, FRANCES, Squatting for the Prevention of Haemorrhoids? 1986, 5pp, 21, in PP 1452. – How much good health has to do with personal freedom is all too often only noticed when one no longer has it. I am often surprised by the number of basic questions that are still not settled and whose discussion is usually avoided. Sitting on now conventional seats, while not on the toilet, does probably do more harm. We are not yet adapted to it and may never be. Moreover, sitting down at work, for long periods, becomes more and more common, as the number of blue collar workers becomes smaller and smaller and those of office workers larger and larger. – J.Z.

MARTIN, BRIAN, Sticking a Needle into Science: The Case of Polio Vaccines & the Origin of AIDS, from SOCIAL STUDIES OF SCIENCE, Vol. 26 (1996), 245-76, 32pp, submitted by the author, 121 – 136, in PP 1446. – All too often “scientists” do “respond” like politicians do. – J.Z.

MARTIN, BRIAN, Ten Areas for Anarchist Initiatives, 2pp: 20, in PP 1481. – Ten areas for anarchist initiatives: a personal list, 2pp from Visions of Freedom, 1995, 2pp, in PP 474. – I would like to see many more SUCH anarchist contributions. – Finally a listing of ALL possible and desirable anarchist initiatives and all their pro and con and contacts. – J.Z.

MARTIN, BRIAN, Uprooting War, Freedom Press, London, 1984, here only a 2pp flyer and a letter by the author, in PP 974. Advocates “social defence” and in this book reviewed about 1/2 of my peace programme. – J.Z.

MARTIN, JAMES J. to VIC KOMAN, May 22, 1986, The Memory Hole, No. 13, p 18, 1p, in PP 1,021. – I wish most anarchists and libertarian readers and writers and researchers would finally realize that with the economical microfiche self-publishing option we could fast approach an ideal, because complete, “memory hole”, one that could become well abstracted and indexed and reviewed, too, with the help of many active PC users. – J.Z.

MARTIN, JAMES J., The Decolonization of Asia, a 4pp review of: Allies of a Kind: The United States, Britain, and the War Against Japan, 1941-45, by Christopher Thorne, OUP, 796pp, in LIBERTARIAN REVIEW, August 1978, review in PP 1,021.

MARTIN, JAMES J., WALKER, J.L., Foreword to JAMES L. WALKER, The Philosophy of Egoism, 1972, 29x, in PP 878.

MARTIN, JAMES J., We Never Called him “Larry”: A Reminiscence of Laurance Labadie, with some necessary additional comments about our mutual friend, Agnes Inglis, 14pp, 1978, in PP 875.

MARTIN, JAMES J., What I Don’t Believe, 17pp, n.d., previously partly reproduced in THE VOLUNTARYIST, in PP 1,018.

MARTIN, JAMES J., What I Don’t Believe, 3pp, in PP 1150.

MARTIN, JAMES J., Who Wants to Be “Free”? 1p, 24x in PP 55. – I still cherish the day of discussion and browsing through his library, that I had in 1990. – Alas, I still have not fiched all the texts I got from him for this. – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MARTIN, JAMES J., Who Wants to Be “Free”? 1p, from THE INTERPRETER, 1948, in PP 1420/22: 115.

MARTIN, MALACHI B., Pope John Paul II. Out of this World, 4pp: 53, in PP 1506/07.

MARTIN, RUDOLF, Der Mensch ohne Moral. Die Philosophie der Macht und Anpassung, 1926, 73 S., in PP 275. – From a copy found in Kurt Zube’s library. Not recommended by me as a libertarian book but just as one belonging into a complete Stirner collection. The author had, apparently, read Stirner but did not get much wiser by this encounter. I am reminded of the remark by G. Chr. Lichtenberg: “Dies Buch ist ein Spiegel. Wenn ein Affe hineinguckt kann kein Apostel herausschauen.” (This book is a mirror. When an ape looks into it, then no apostle will look out of it.) Martin, alas, remained full of common prejudices, reminding me of the view of HELMS, HANS G. (Die Ideologie der anonymen Gesellschaft), that at least for some, if not many, Stirner, with his all too loose terminology and condemnation of everyone who thought different, was a stepping stone to totalitarianism. From “might is right” to “Leader command, we will follow you!” and “One empire, one people, one leader!” is not a very large step. Too many found it easy to discard his individualistic message and to continue with his remaining glorification of power and his communist notions. Only an independent and real thinker can get SOME value out of Stirner and will not be turned into his uncritical follower, as, alas, even Kurt Zube was. Not recommended by me as a libertarian book but just as one belonging into a complete Stirner collection. – J.Z.

MARTINEAU, HARRIET, Illustrations of Political Economy, 1832-34, 9 volumes, 3570pp, reproduced on 5 fiche, 29x, PP 701-705. – William Graham Sumner once said that he learned all his basic economics from her. Most of her illustrations make good to fair stories, too, and can by now be read like historical novelettes. – J.Z.

MARTUCCI, ENZO, Manifesto of the Outsiders, 3pp, with comment by S.E. Parker, in PP 1420/22: 238.

MARTUCCI, ENZO, My Polemic with E. Armand, 3pp, in PP 1420/22: 469.

MARTUCCI, ENZO, Neither East nor West! 1p, in PP 1420/22: 59.

MARTUCCI, ENZO, Neither East nor West!, 1p: 51, in PP 1465.

MARTUCCI, ENZO, Nietzsche, 3pp, in PP 1420/22: 88.

MARTUCCI, ENZO, Renzo Novatore, 4pp, in PP 1420/22: 292.

MARTYN, BARBARA, Worker Control Brings New Life to Factory, 3pp, 29x, in PP 294-297.

MARVEL, HOWARD P., Factory Regulation: A Reinterpretation of Early English Experience, THE JOURNAL OF LAW AND ECONOMICS 20, Oct. 77, 379-402, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p709, headed: Factory Regulation and Vested Interest.

MASLEN, GEOFFREY, Would you take this kid to be your unlawfully educated son? 2pp, 1972, 36x, in PP 714.

MASON, JOHN W., Political Economy and the Response to Socialism in Britain, 1870-1914, THE HISTORICAL JOURNAL 23, Sep. 80, 565-587, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1203p1481, headed: British Anti-socialism: 1870-1914.

MASON, WILL E., Winners and Losers: Some Paradoxes in Monetary History Resolved and Some Lessons Unlearned, HISTORY OF POLITICAL ECONOMY, Winter 77, 476-489, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p707, headed: Specie Money vs. Antibullionists. – Monetary freedom offers many other alternatives and options. The narrow-mindedness of such discussions disappoints me. As if we could not see and exchange otherwise than through golden spectacles. Ticket money is almost costless (apart from the self-imposed obligation involved) and yet not worthless. The prejudiced reviewing the prejudiced! – J.Z.

MASTY, S.J., The Birth of an Idea, 2pp: 852, in PP 1484/85. On libertarianism. To my regret this is the only sample that I have on hand. I say that as an atheist about a Christian journal, that is also libertarian. Due to my libertarian bias and the very purpose of LMP, I do not list the rest of the articles, which are not explicitly libertarian. Three libertarian articles in as few pages do impress me. – J.Z.

MATONIS, JON A., A Critique of Marx’s “The Power of Money in Bourgois Society in the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844, 16 Aug. 85, 8pp, in PP 810.

MATONIS, JON W., 1.) letters to Theo Megalli reg. Monetary freedom, statement on his Institute for Monetary Freedom, table of the contents of his Anarchy and Money and of The Political Appropriation of the Monetary Unit, with letters exchanged between him & John Zube, 18 July 86 – 8 Aug. 86, 11pp, 48x, in PP 645, 2.) to Carl WATNER, 2 Nov. 86, 1p. & 3.) to Siegfried SCHWENKE, 19 August 86, with note to J.Zube, 1p, 48x, in PP 740.

MATONIS, JON W., Anarchy and Money, Dec. 12, 1984, 20 pp, with select bibliography, 48x, in PP 740. – Free banking discussion. – He planned once a monetary freedom institute and quarterly – but nothing has come of it. The reason may be that there is still no directory to all who are strongly in favour of this liberty. – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MAURICE, CHARLES S., Who Should Bail Out the Banks? 2pp: 79, in PP 1469. – When bankers malinvest billions (A $ 905 billion in Japan alone, according to Sydney Morning Herald, 9 May 98) then at the very least all those working in a bank, as well as all shareholders in banks, should be held personally responsible with all of their private property for such losses. At least in this sphere limited responsibility companies should be ended. That should make them a little more responsible in their supervisory efforts and in the granting of loans. However, even the sharpest discipline would be no substitute for full financial and monetary freedom. – J.Z., 17.5.98.

MAURICE, S. CHARLES & PEJOVICH, STEVE, A Proposal for a New Form of Tax Indexing, 1p: 55, in PP 1469.

MAXIMOFF, G.P., Constructive Anarchism. “A defence of Anarcho-syndicalism against ‘Platformism’ and ‘Synthetical anarchism’, 1930, 1952, 1988, with added documents 46pp: 72, in PP 1482. – With my cheap microfiche offers of syndicalist writings, I seem to be a “scab” in their eyes, for none of the syndicalists that I know has so bothered to order any of them from me. Perhaps I should be grateful that they are not getting violent about my undercutting the prices for their literature output which, in “truly radical” fashion, is still using a basically 500 year old technology? – J.Z.

MAXIMOFF, G.P., My Social Credo, 1933 – 1983, 15pp, in PP 1210.

MAXIMOFF, G.P., Program of Anarcho-Syndicalism, 1927, published 1952 in the book Constructive Anarchism, by Maximoff. Here reproduced from the 1985 edition of Monty Miller Press, Sydney, in PP 1164.

MAXIMOFF, G.P., Rebellion: Mikhail Bakunin. An extract from his book: Bakunin, 46pp: 132, in PP 1481. – With appendix: The Program of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, 1919, 3pp: 148, in PP 1481.

MAXIMOFF, G.P., Syndicalists in the Russian Revolution, 1979 edition, 16pp, with “Afterward: relevance to workers in the 80/s”, by STEIN, JEFF, 8pp, in PP 1140.

MAY, WILLIAM E., The Meaning and Nature of the Natural Law in Thomas Aquinas, AMERICAN JOURNAL OF JURISPRUDENCE 22, 1977, 168-189 summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1200p580, headed: Aquinas and Natural Law.

MAYBURY, RICHARD J., The Thousand Year War, on Middle East struggles, 19pp, in PP 1,020, 7pp, in PP 1243/44. – The recent wars considered as mere continuations of The Crusades! A libertarian outlook on the Middle East, with some references to its part-panarchistic tradition but not with a consistent application of panarchistic principles. He goes beyond the usual democratic constitutionalism and limited governmentalism. – J.Z.

MAYBURY, RICHARD J., Will Mr. Greenspan Ruin You or Make You Rich? Libertarian Look at the Fed, MONEYWORLD, Sep. 88, 3pp, in PP 1240.

MAYBURY, RICHARD, Spotlight, on the influence of weapons in citizen hands on history, 1p, in PP 1283-1286p164.

MAYO, KATHERINE, Mother India, first published 1927, 26th printing: July 1930. Since then? Indexed, 452pp, in PP 1443/44: 1-108. – Ulrich von Beckerath, 1882-1969 recommended this book to me, as one NOT viewing India through rose-coloured glasses. Then I never got around to read more than a few chapters. Long after his death, I did finally get around to photocopy the whole book, from what was accessible to me of his former library, and even then I only skim-read it – until recently, when I finally read the whole. Ulrich von Beckerath was right. It is an important book although not an explicitly libertarian one. It severely criticizes one religion, orthodox Hinduism, and what it has done to the Indian people, those following this faith. At least one religion is shown as then still all too popular, as degenerating rather than improving man, women and children. Have Amnesty International and the U.N. ever criticized these human rights violations? – Have even parliamentarism, the welfare State, the bureaucracy, been as disabling, then and there? – Have similar religious and sexual practices done similar harm in other countries and other religious and ethnic communities? At least in some parts of Africa child slavery does still exists. – This book has been out of print for all too long. I did not see it for decades of book hunting – but then I rarely ever browsed through sections on India. If you are lucky then you can still find a second-hand copy in these sections. How can a book that that was once a bestseller become so much a non-seller, that it is allowed to get out of print? Note, however, that at least by 1985 Greenwood Press offered a reprint for 21 UK Pounds or $ 22.50. – The atrocious conditions reported by K. Mayo have probably been somewhat improved by now – but not yet enough, as one of today’s clippings showed me and a talk yesterday with a Hindu couple, who also said that among the poor in India e.g. child marriages are still widely practised. – Was competition from other religions and whatever enlightenment that was provided by atheism, rationalism, humanism, agnosticism, not strong enough to reduce this degree of ignorance and prejudice? Would exterritorial autonomy in all spheres be required, there, too, and would it suffice, to bring about positive changes fast? Judging by this book and various other hints, I would not pick upon India as a starting place for introducing individual liberties widely. It still seems to be held back by religions, especially by orthodox Hinduism, as was Europe, in the Middle Ages, by Christianity. From China a number of monetary freedom experiments were reported. I still have to hear of a single one in India. – Apparently, not even any open air speaking centre was possible there, so far. One can only suppose that, most likely, it would have led to bloodshed. – But the very caste system of India has also an important lesson to teach: Very different kinds of groups CAN COEXIST peacefully in the same country. Its worst features were the coercion and the privileges involved. If it had been a voluntary rather than an involuntary (by birth) segregation and if free scope had been left to voluntary integration, for those who liked it, rather than trying to spread compulsory integration, e.g. in the public service, then and under these conditions, the caste system might have promoted liberty and progress rather than oppression and exploitation. And it could have been extended to all kinds of other groups and communities – even while e.g. Western “civilization” would have spread among those who liked them. – A number of writers have asked: How much further would India have developed – if at least most of its silver and gold had been coined out rather than being hoarded or used as jewellery. Perhaps only Ulrich von Beckerath went beyond that suggestion with his proposal that every money lender in India should be permitted to become a free banker, issuing his own optional, i.e. refusable and market rated banknotes, under freedom of choice for value standards, too. The interest rate, at least for black market loans, appears to be still around 120% p.a.! At least for turnover credits it could then have been rapidly reduced to 1% p.a., or even less. – Traditional communistic sharing practices within the extended families, as well as the practice of excessive expenditures upon celebrations, would have to be discontinued by those who would want to build up, own, retain and manage productive capital. These and probably many other abuses would have to be ended, too. Mayo just concentrates on some. Some notes on how to promote rapid development in India through monetary freedom can be found in PP 415 & 740. – J.Z., 9/97.

MAYO, KATHERINE, Volume Two, 1931, 262pp, in PP 1443/44: 108-170. “To those persons in India who strive to end Hindu child marriages”. – I found this recently at a local bookshop, when I checked out the availability of “Mother India”. The bookshop, Berkelouws, had 4 copies of Mother India and one of Volume Two. – I read and was impressed by Volume Two as well. It concentrates on the case against child marriages. Girls, IF allowed to live, were and are apparently still perceived, by all too many Hindu parents, as mere burdens, to be disposed of, as soon as possible, to the families of their husbands. The “obligatory” dowry seems to be fixed all the lower the younger the girl is. Mayo reports even a princely family in India, which did not allow its girl children to live, for all of ca. 400 years, because marrying them off would have been “too expensive” for it. Child murder was cheaper! Hindu customs and marriage laws seem to see to it that these girls are not highly appreciated in the husband’s family, either, and are easily replaceable there. And once they are rejected by the husbands and the families of the husbands, too, without property, support payments, education, jobs and respect, then, in this environment, only prostitution and begging seem to be open to them. Thus they tend to suffer almost any abuse all too patiently. – These abuses form some of the strongest cases for children’s and women’s individual rights but advocates of such rights often end their concerns for them at their national borders. To see these conditions in context and without jumping into collective “judgments”, we should remember how relatively recent hygienic life styles were for European people, too, how neglected individual rights of children still are, and those of women were, until early in this century, and that, according to some reports, the minimum marriage age in England, before WW I, was also down to 12 years for girls. Nor do the abortion figures in Western countries speak for a large appreciation of the rights of children there, in the period before their birth. The West has its “caste” system, too, in form of segregated and privileged trade and professional unions. And our “Brahmins” are the top politicians and bureaucrats, who treat us as voting cattle and milking cows or sheep to be shorn & slaughtered, and pay only some lip service to our individual rights and liberties, while infringing them in uncounted ways, often quite legally, with laws passed for this purpose under one or the other pretence – to their advantage. Under the pretence of wanting to help our youths, they passed and maintained minimum wage laws for them which rendered in Australia up to 40% of them unemployed! The government-miseducated masses give the sanction of the victims to this and began to howl in protest when the current prime minister, John Howard, merely suggested that we review these laws. Alas, the same guy introduced severe anti-gun laws and could not even uphold the proposal of a very limited experiment that would have done away with some of the anti-drug laws. So we do not really have enough reasons to be proud of ourselves in comparison with the conditions reported by Mayo. – Herbert Spencer, in “Social Statics”, pointed out that we cannot expect a sufficient appreciation of individual rights while those of women and children are still widely neglected. – Today’s paper reported atrocious working conditions for children in China, in e.g. shoe factories financed from the West. But that happens under special conditions, the background of an underdeveloped country, held back by communist “economics” for decades and with ca. 200 million unemployed. – Would such conditions have arisen and persisted under full employment conditions (full monetary & financial freedom, in addition to all the other economic liberties) for all able and willing to work? – I can only hope that this book will not be perceived as a racist book. It attacks just one orthodox religion in India, not any particular “race” there. But it also points out what the persistence of such beliefs and customs can do to the survival chances, liberties, health, life style and mentality of people engaged in them. Judging by Mayo’s books one could say that orthodox Hinduism has promoted and maintained paedophilia and child murder in India. If that is conceded, then one should ask oneself, as a freedom lover, whether one should advocate free migration and the right to asylum not only to the victims of such a religion but also to its practitioners, its victimizers. I knew an Indian who was convicted of having killed his 12 year old daughter. He had taken all the blame upon himself but it seemed that the mother was also involved in this killing. Would we want many such immigrants and should we be tolerant towards such actions in other countries? Can we reduce them more effectively than by spreading knowledge, appreciation and practice of individual rights, everywhere? – Knowledge of the then existing and partly still continuing conditions in India might help to undermine the image and followership of various Indian gurus, whose “teachings” keep people from their moral and rational tasks as rational beings. – Mayo, too, showed the English colonial government more as a protector, developer, educator and liberator than as an oppressor. However, while eliminating some internal warfare and oppression, e.g. the burning of widows, their freedom promoting influence was not strong enough. They still imposed territorial laws and did not see to it that all somewhat enlightened people could freely opt out from under them and the prevailing customs. – How would India have developed under a VOLUNTARY caste system, permitting individual secessions and individual associations, with justice between these voluntary caste groups and other voluntary communities, all doing their own things for and to themselves only? Would the better examples then have been widely enough copied by now? Replacing English territorial rule by Indian, Pakistani and Bangladesh territorial rule was not good enough. The governments of Pakistan & India, too, are now nuclear giants and ethical infants, as Omar Bradley said. There were even people joyfully dancing in the street about this! (May/June 98. – Nor, apparently, did the Christian missionaries bring enough enlightenment. They rather added their prejudices to the existing ones. – Have the fans of the Indian non-violence movement shown sufficient concern with the violence inherent in these Hindu customs? – In very general terms this book, too, shows what human beings are often capable of and what they are often incapable of. – J.Z., 9/9/97, 7.6.98.

MAYO, MARK, Convict Cities: A Solution? 2pp, in PP 1432/1439: 1505. – Already the large prisons have usually worse rehabilitation rates than the small ones. City-sized prisons would be even worse. However, is one is not concerned with rehabilitation and leaves that to convicts themselves, then much is to be said for some kind of isolation for them – if only the whole spectrum of criminals is not simply mixed up, which could easily turn some of them worse and also into victims. – The Nazis have set examples for large scale forced labour – but for innocents or those who dared to oppose them. Penal servitude does not mean that the crime victims ought to tax themselves to support convicts in relative idleness, and often their families, too. – See my prison article in PP 13. – Look up Spencer” “Prison Ethics” and Robert Heinlein’s “Coventry”. – J.Z., 10.10.97.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, Fascist Romanism Defies Civilization. How the Pope Keeps to the Plot while the World Curses it, Haldeman – Julius Publications, The Black International No. 10, 1942, 32pp, in PP 1225.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, Freethinkers and the Struggle for Freedom, from a 1970 reprint, 23pp: 67, in PP 1496. – Unfortunately, not all atheists have continued to be champions of liberty in every sphere. On the contrary, some of them, especially communist fanatics, have in this century mistreated, imprisoned and murdered so many dissenters that their numbers may have exceeded that of all the previous victims of “Christian” churches during all the centuries. Some figures may have been compiled on this. I have not yet seen them. But this reverse, equivalent and contemporary persecution on the basis of some other dogmas should be kept in mind when perusing such pamphlets. Atheists have certainly not always represented the side of the “angels”. – J.Z., 24.10.85.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, Man and his Submission to Being Ruled. The Evolution of Government and Political Forms, n.d., Haldeman – Julius Publications, Key to Culture No. 23, 61pp, in PP 1220.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, Morality in the Nineteenth Century. The Development of Modern Puritanism, Haldeman – Julius Publications, in sub-series: A History of Human Morals, vol. XI, No. 493, n.d., 64pp, in PP 1222.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, Morals in the Ancient World. Ideas and Practices in Ancient Egypt, Babylonia, Assyria and Judea, n.d., 64pp, volume II of A History of Human Morals, ed. by E. Haldeman – Julius, no series number, in PP 1207.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Bloody Story of Antisemitism down the Ages. A Few Friendly Counsels of a Freethinker to the Members of our Three Great Religions, 1947, 29pp, Haldeman – Julius Publications, B-584, in PP 1220.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Catholic Church and the Sex Problem. The Stupidity, Futility, and Insolence of its Ethic, 1949, 29pp, Haldeman – Julius Publication No. B – 812, in PP 1226.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Church Defies Modern Life. One Sound Catholic Boast – We Never Change, 1942, 30pp, The Black International No. 15, 2nd series, Haldeman – Julius Publications, in PP 1226. – Even the Catholic Church has changed over the centuries. However, I would not trust it or any other, if anywhere a religious monopoly were re-established or wherever it still continues to some extent. – J.Z.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Church the Enemy of the Workers. Rome is the Natural Ally of all Exploiters, 1942, 32pp, The Black International No. 14, 2nd. series, Haldeman – Julius Publications, in PP 1226. The Pope is one of the few religious leaders advocating at least some types of cooperative self-help. Even the devil should not be maligned. – J.Z.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Columbia Encyclopedia’s Crimes against the Truth. How a Popular Reference Work Is Being Used as a Weapon against Free Culture and Twisted to Fit the Purposes of Lying Obscurantists, 1951, 48pp, Haldeman – Julius Publications, No. B-939, in PP 1226.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Dawn of the Modern Spirit, Sketches of Jefferson, Goethe, Schiller, Pestalozzi, Watt and Beethoven, n.d., 61pp, Haldeman – Julius Publications, B-461, vol. XIII in the series : One Hundred Men Who Moved the World. Character Sketches of the Greatest Creative Forces of History, in PP 1220.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Dawn of the Modern Spirit, Sketches of Voltaire, Rousseau, D’Aranda, Franklin and Diderot, Haldeman-Julius Co., n.d., 63pp, vol. XI in the series: 100 Men who Moved the World, Character Sketches of the Greatest Creative Forces of History, edited by E. Haldeman-Julius, No. 464 of his series, in PP 1164.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Effect of the Reformation on Morals. An Impartial Inquiry into the Question whether the Morals of Europe Improved after the Reformation, n.d., 64pp, vol. X, in A History of Human Morals, ed. by E. Haldeman-Julius, series No. 492, in PP 1207.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Final Struggle, Sketches of Napoleon, Byron, Shelley, Bolivar & Robert Owen, vol. XIV, 100 Men Who Moved the World, Character Sketches of the Greatest Creative Forces in History, 62pp, Haldeman-Julius Publications, in PP 1115.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Fruits of Romanism, The Catholic Church Does far more Hrm than Good, 1942, 31pp, The Black International No. 19, 2nd series, in PP 1225.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Gay Chronicle of the Monks and Nuns, n.d., 32pp, in LBB 1509, in PP 1206.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Gospel Faire-Tale, n.d., 4pp, in PP 1239.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The History and Meaning of the Catholic Index of Forbidden Books, 1931, 107pp, Haldeman – Julius Publications, B-580, in PP 1220.

MCCABE, JOSEPH, The Menace of Mysticisms. The Place of Bunk in the Worlds of Thought, Emotion, and Action – what it has done and is doing – what it would mean in terms of human progress if we outgrew it. Haldeman – Julius Publications, B-539, 1947, 91pp, in PP 1220.

MCCARRY, JOHN, Peru Begins Again: A few lines from NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC, 5/96, on informal economy (50% of jobs): 80, in PP 1495. – If only they were aware of and practised monetary freedom as well! – J.Z. – See Underground Economy & Black Markets.

MCCARTHY, EUGENE J. & KILPATRICK, JAMES J., The Gathering Momentum, 1p: 108, in PP 1506/07. – From their book: A Political Bestiary, 1978.

MCCARTHY, EUGENE J. & KILPATRICK, JAMES J., The Investigative Reporter, 1p: 131, in PP 1506/07. From their book: A Political Bestiary, 1978.

MCCARTHY, EUGENE J. & KILPATRICK, JAMES J., The Leaping Quantum, 1p: 84, in PP 1506/07. From their book: A Political Bestiary, 1978.

MCCARTHY, EUGENE J. & KILPATRICK, JAMES J., The Untouchable Incumbent, 1p: 131, in PP 1506/07. From their book: A Political Bestiary, 1978.

MCCARTHY, EUGENE J. & KILPATRICK, JAMES J., The Viable Alternative, 2pp from their book: A Political Bestiary, 1978: 57, in PP 1506/07.

MCCARTHY, EUGENE J. & KILPATRICK, JAMES J., Tight and Other Budgets, 1p: 175, in PP 1506/07. – From their book: A Political Bestiary, 1978.

MCCLUSKEY, STEPHEN C., Evangelists, Educators, Ethnographers, and the Establishment of the Hopi Reservation, THE JOURNAL OF ARIZONA HISTORY 21, Winter 80, 363-390, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 12031392p, headed: U.S. Pacification of the Hopi.

MCCOLLEY, ROBERT, Radical Political Thought in the American Revolution, JOURNAL OF THE ILLINOIS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 69, 1976, 2: 91-99, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p701, headed: Liberty and the American Revolution.

MCCORD, HOWARD, 25 Reasons why you Will Probably Die at the Hands of a Government Agent, 1p, in PP 1269.

MCCORD, HOWARD, The Coming Civil War in America, 1p, in PP 1269.

MCCORD, HOWARD, Why Government Is Public Enemy No. 1, 1p, in PP 1269.

MCCORMICK, PETER, The Concept of Self in Political Thought, CANADIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE 12, Dec. 79, 689-725, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1202p1014, headed: The Self in Political Thought.

MCCORMICK, ROBERT R., Col., The Sacking of America, 1932, 58pp, in PP 1,015.

MCDANIEL, THOMAS R., Weber and Kafka on Bureaucracy: A Question of Perspective, THE SOUTH ATLANTIC QUARTERLY 78, Sum. 79, 361-375, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1202p985, headed: Bureaucracy in Weber and Kafka.

MCDERMOTT, JOHN, et al, The New Left’s Approach to Decentralization and the Free Market, 4pp, 24x, in PP 6.

MCDONAGH, DAVID, Is the State Based on mere Dogma? 8pp: 115, in PP 1505.

MCDONALD, FOREST & GRADY MCWHINEY, The South from Self-Sufficiency to Peonage: An Interpretation, AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW 85, Dec. 80, 1095-1118, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1203p1393, headed: The Celtic South: The Aftermath of War. This description of much leisure, for slaves as well as masters and free men, in the South, reminds me of G.B. Shaw’s remark: Freedom means leisure! – Naturally, it does not excuse the wrongs of slavery but it casts another point of view upon the “liberation” of the South. – J.Z.

MCDONALD, KENNETH, Keeping Canada Together, 1p leaflet for the book, in PP 1271. Individual Canadians could be much more satisfied if the Canadian Empire were allowed to fall apart – or were continued only among volunteers – and if no new sub-empire, with compulsory membership and exclusive and territorial sovereignty were allowed to arise. – PIOT! J.Z.

MCELROY, WENDY, LIBERTY, 1881 – 1908, A Comprehensive Index, compiled by MCELROY, WENDY, 1982, 162pp, in PP 960. – This printing job was not one of Michael Coughlin’s better ones. The print is often too faint for my liking. I used up 2 expensive bound copies for this filming, selecting the somewhat better pages and the outcome is still not good. I may have to refilm the lot from the typed copy, of which I have a photocopy. There are also some references corresponding to my special interests, which I would have liked to see included. An open index system could similarly cater to the special interests of others, so that finally real comprehensiveness is achieved. – J.Z.

MCELROY, WENDY, Lucifer : The light bearer, 4pp, in PP 1373/75: 193. – 4pp, in PP 1430/31: 187. – Years ago she suggested that I should microfiche this famous periodical, but not how or where I could get a copy of it. – J.Z.

MCELROY, WENDY, Notes in TC 105, with panarchistic comments by J. Zube, part of 9pp, 29x, in PP 869.

MCGRAW, ONALEE, Family Choice in Education: The New Imperative, Washington, D.C., The Heritage Foundation, 1978, 60pp, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1200p491, headed: Education and Family Autonomy.

MCGREGOR, RICHARD, End of the line for Japan’s dying art. Review of TSURUMI, WATARU, The Complete Manual of Suicide, a bestseller in Japan, telling Japanese how to do it the Western way. 2pp, in PP 1321. – While I do not deny the right to engage in such a self-destructive action in desperate and hopeless situations, with no other way out, I would be disinclined to publish such a book without a guide bringing all the arguments, in most situations, against suicide. Those who did not succeed with a suicide attempt or were forcefully prevented from carrying it out, are mostly grateful afterwards. If not, they are free to try again. But once it becomes a well considered and rational decision, then the execution of it should be made as easy as possible and, upon request, should even be assisted by people willing to render such aid. That was already proposed by emperor Marcus Aurelius in the time of the Roman Empire. Not enough progress has occurred in this field so far. What is now called “voluntary euthanasia” or “assisted suicide” is still controversial in most countries and “living wills” are either not made on this or are habitually ignored. – All that man- and womanpower WASTED by unnecessary suicides, under conditions of emotional turmoil and in the absence of help! Think of e.g. how many books these people could have microfiched, instead, if they had gone on living, doing something as useful, working towards a just, free & peaceful society. – J.Z., 5.6.96.

MCINNIS, NOEL, The Tao of Networking, 2pp, incomplete, from THE FUTURIST, June 84, 29x, in PP 928.

MCINTOSH, TRUDI, Why Companies Need to Nurture Human Factor, 1p from THE AUSTRALIAN, Sep. 7, 1993. – On how modern management gradually discovers aspects of self-management. But it has still a long way to go before it comes away from the remaining attitudes of “managing” human beings in the sphere of production and exchange. The better managements manage least and the best possible management manages by not managing at all, having discovered the “TAO” of production & exchange. – J.Z., 11.8.95.

MCLAUGHLIN, ROBERT J., Socrates on Political Disobedience: A Reply to Gary Young, PHRONESIS, U.K., 21, 1976, 185-197, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1199p70. Headed: State and Morality.

MCLEOD, DON, Computer Politics Change Game Rules, 1977, 2pp, on computerization of addresses of conservatives, according to special interests, for successful fund and other appeals. 29x, in PP 388. See under Directories for the still all too incomplete anarchist and libertarian efforts of this kind.

MCLEOD, HENRY DUNNING, The Science of Economics and its Relation to Free Exchange and Socialism, 1894, 46pp, 29x, in PP 371.

MCNEILL, WILLIAM H., Trends of Scholarship in the Social Sciences, 1980-2000. In: A Rededication to Scholarship: Papers Presented at the Dedication of the New Central Library, University of Cincinnati, ed. by James K. Robinson, U of Cincinnati P, 1980, 35-45, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP1204p1776, headed: The Developmental Paradigm of Social Science.

MCNULTY, MARIE, God and Cryonics, 1p:94, in PP 1293/95.

MCPHEE, JOHN, Coming into the Country, 6 pp excerpt from the book, same title, 1977, in PP 1318/1319: 61, 69, 77. They escaped the crowds for a while, in the Alaskan wilderness, but were still crowded by government officials and even crowded out by them. – J.Z.

MCPHERSON, C.B., The Economic Penetration of Political Theory: Some Hypotheses, JOURNAL OF HISTORY OF IDEAS 39, 1978, 101-118, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p703, headed: How Economics Influences Political Theory.

MCRAE, KENNETH D., The Plural Society and the Western Political Tradition, CANADIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE 12, Dec. 79, 675-688, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1202p1111, headed: Tolerance and Cultural Diversity. – Typically, only tolerance for CULTURAL diversity is discussed, not full exterritorial autonomy for volunteer communities. Political “scientists”, too are ridden by their models, even to death and towards mass murder. – J.Z.

MEAD, WALTER J., The Performance of Government in Energy Regulation, AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, May 79, 352-365, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1201p784, headed: Government Energy Conservation.

MEANDER QUARTERLY, V/1 (May 93); V/2 (Aug. 93); V/3 (Nov. 93); V/4 (Feb.94); V/5 (May94); V/6 (Aug.94); VI/1 (Nov.94); VI/2 (Mar.95); VI/3 (June 95); VI/4 (Sep. 95), 200pp: 16, in PP 1475. – Well, what can you offer in a short newsletter? Letters, hints and news spots and addresses but not set pieces and lengthy and thorough discussions. If each were accompanied by a microfiche with 126 large to 504 small pages, 29x reduced, it would be another matter. But that is one of those topics only very rarely discussed in them. – I can’t afford the cost, time and energy to subscribe, peruse and respond to all such publications. If all of them were preserved and accessible on fiche, disks and online, then they could be gradually supplemented and corrected by others than their original small circles. In some ways they offer more than one to one letter-writing does and in other respects they give even less of a chance, because of their limited number of pages. I wish more anarchists and libertarians would consider the existence and usually short life span of small freedom periodicals, in print on paper, as more of a problem than as a solution to their communication difficulties. Consider e.g. that there may not be a single place in the world with a complete collection of all these publications, although some of them might contain valuable information. Stamp and money collectors treat their collection items more thoroughly and systematically than anarchists and libertarians treat their own writings and ideas and they are, as a rule, not even aware and ashamed of this. Freedom ideas are our greatest assets – and yet how shabbily do we treat them! – What fraction of them is generally known or easily accessible to most freedom advocates? – J.Z., 18.5.98.

MECKLING, WILLIAM H., Financial Markets, Default, and Bankruptcy: the Role of the State, LAW AND CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS 41, Autumn 77, 13-38, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1200p501, headed: Is Bankruptcy Law Bankrupt? – It is bankrupt, anyhow, by making no provision for citizens to drive governments into bankruptcy, recovering for themselves whatever assets remain. Compare PP 19 C. – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MEDIA DISTRIBUTION COOP, 1987, 1p hint, in PP 808. – Rather than just another attempt at more efficient distribution of information to the mass media, hoping for coverage by them, I would like to see a widespread distribution and optimal use of alternative media, using e.g. the micrographic option for cheap Reproduction of whatever one likes, making it thus PERMANENTLY accessible upon demand, at the lowest cost & effort so far readily available to almost everybody. The task consists, mostly, not in reaching the masses of disinterested people but, rather, the few who would be interested and who would, sooner or later, act as opinion-makers or become enabled/liberated, to do their own thing. Why duplicate any information beyond that requirement? Whoever wants to be enlightened ONLY through his favourite medium may not deserve any further enlightenment efforts by others. – J.Z.

MEDIA WATCH, July 94, Network for Intellectual Dissent in Australia, IDiA, 27pp. Mainly a reproduction of clippings and of various whistle-blowing efforts, all subjects, not particularly libertarian or anarchistic. Picked up at VISIONS OF FREEDOM, in PP 475.

MEDIA: GROSSBERG, MICHAEL, Freeing Up the Media, 1p, in PP 1378/81: 405. – As usual, only the mass media are considered. Ignore them. Do your own thing on alternative media, which are already free and much more affordable and lasting. On them you can accumulate as much wisdom that finally the mass media will have to come to you – or you can shoot down their spokesmen quite effectively, one by one, with the best assortment of arguments and facts so far found. – J.Z., 12.5.97.

MEDIA? See: PP 633. How can one talk about them and study them and write books about them and run scientific institutes, concerned with them – while completely ignoring the micrographic media? This is done, all the time, almost everywhere, by many people and associations. What they mean is MASS MEDIA and ACCESS to THEM, NOT media which each member of the masses can freely use for his concerns – and can afford to use. Microfiche use, theoretically, could become as widespread as the use of cameras and tape recorders and PCs. And not only libraries have a good motive to save shelving space with microfilms. Few private homes have sufficient space for large private libraries. And they are so hard and costly to move – and to bring into order again after each move. Nor are they portable in any significant selections. They are also almost impossible to duplicate for one’s children, in print on paper, in a way that one can be sure they will take them along, through all their moves, during their lives. So, go fiching – for liberty! Or uses floppies and CD-ROM text issues. But do no longer consider print on paper as a miracle weapon for achieving sufficient enlightenment. – J.Z.

MEDICAL TYRANNY, See: TASSANO, FABIAN, The Power of Life or Death, A Critique of Medical Tyranny, 2pp leaflet for the book, in PP 1334/35: 221.

MEDIEVALISM, See: KROEGER, JUDITH, Medievalism: Mr Lippmann’s old home remedy, 3pp, in PP 1377: 49. – We could do, though, with some of the autonomy then existing for voluntary associations, as well as its armed and trained citizens, standing up for their rights against the kings and feudal lords of their times. – J.Z.

MEEK, NIGEL, Society Does Not Exist (and if it Did it Shouldn’t), 4pp, Political Notes No. 144: 93, in PP 1516. – I hold that only voluntaristic and exterritorially autonomous societies deserve the name “societies” and communities and that territorial States ought not to exist but dissolved, as threats to freedom, justice, peace, progress and prosperity. – PIOT, J.Z., 10.11.98.

MEGAZINE BULLETIN, Fanzine Information, from Small Mags Archive, permanently exhibited in De Media, Molenstraat 165, 9000 Eeklo, in Belgium or Holland. Date?, in PP 1323: 57. Back in PP 927 I made a mistake and thus only 2 of these 4 sheets fitted in. Compare FACTSHEET FIVE.

MEGAZINE BULLETIN, of the SMALL MAGS ARCHIVE in DE MEDIA, Netherlands, 4pp, in PP 927.

MEGILL, ALLAN, Foucault, Structuralism, and the Ends of History, JOURNAL OF MODERN HISTORY 51, Sep. 79, 451-503, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1202p1105, headed: Foucault’s Structuralist History.

MEISELMAN, DAVID I., Are Tax Cuts Inflationary? 3pp, 1981, in PP 1538: 13. – If the central bank keeps churning out the same quantity or even more of forced currency, then less taxes mean less tax foundation for them & thus depreciation. But the main cause would still be the issue monopoly and legal tender for its paper. Without that monopoly and fiat value the paper money of the government would depreciate but stable value reckoning and a monetary economy could go on undisturbed, even though government notes would become more and more valueless and more and more widely refused altogether. They would then have no more power over the economy than has the play money of the game “Monopoly”. – J.Z., 8.1.1999.

MELANOMA: DAYTON, LEIGH, Ray of Hope for Skin Cancer Cure, 96, 1p, in PP 1418: 125. On a genetically engineered vaccine against melanoma. – I have my doubts about genetic decision-making being exclusively in the hands of governments, large corporations or scientists. All their offers should amount to no more than more free choices for self-responsible individuals. – J.Z., 3.10.97. – See: Cancer. – Is there already a site on the Internet for all alternative proposals and methods to treat cancer – and their pro and con? – J.Z., 17.6.99.

MELECHINSKY, ANDY, Constitutional Revival, in TC, No. 106, 1982, 1p – No 366 of PP 907-910. (Has anyone his current address? I hate to lose contact with those few who have so far bothered to equip themselves with a microfiche reading machine. Naturally, this still does not mean that they are going to use it or order from LMP. J.Z.)

MEMORY HOLE, THE, No. 7, July – August 1985, 23pp, in PP 998. – Apart from this sample I have only 2 incomplete issues on hand. Memory Holes should be more accessible. – J.Z.

MEMORY HOLE, THE, No. 9, Nov.- Dec. 85, and some pages of No. 10, Jan.- Feb. 86, both, probably incomplete, 42pp, in PP 1418: 51. – Mostly just opinion exchanges among participants. Without contents list, classification and page numbering. – How were these memories to be retrieved from these holes? – By a major and costly mining effort? – J.Z.

MEN AND MONEY, Newsletter of the Committee for Monetary Research and Education, XV/1, August 1990, 27pp, in PP 1240.

MEN, ESTIMATES OF MEN, See: PP 199.

MENCKEN, H.D., See: GRINDER, R. DALE, H.L. Mencken, Notes on a Libertarian, 10pp: 40, in PP 1501. – This article mentions that Mencken wrote or received some 30,000 letters. Who will fiche or digitize them and make them cheaply accessible. So much of the intellectual heritage of a great mind should not remain more or less buried (for most people) in a library, here the New York Public Libray. – J.Z.

MENCKEN, H.L., Peace through God? or: Self-Thinking & Self-Reliance instead of Faith in a Peace to Be Brought About by Divine Intervention, Solicited by Word-Magic. An extract from his “Prejudices” series, 2pp, 24x, in PP 12.

MENDELSON, SIMON, Mrs., Compiler, A Complete Checklist of the Publications of Joseph Ishill and his Oriole Press, THE AMERICAN BOOK COLLECTOR, Index Vol. 24, Sep. 73 – August 1974, 24pp, in PP 1316: 90-113.

MENGER, ANTON, The Right to the Whole Produce of Labour, The Origin and Development of the Theory of Labour’s Claim to the whole Product of Industry. Translated by M.E. Tanner, 1899, 1962, 189 pp, in PP 1308: 29 – 74. – The main error of the Socialist School is already revealed by this translation. The translator believed labour to be entitled to the whole produce of industry. Rightly it is entitled only to the whole product of ITS industry. And that ought to be measured by free market pricing and corresponding private and cooperative contracts, increasing and extending production and innovation incentives for the individual, rather than diminishing them and not at all via socialistic or cooperative dogmas or utopian prescriptions – except among voluntary victims. The dogmas were so strongly FELT, not thought through and criticized and amended, that all too many socialists arrived not at voluntary and cooperative socialism, that has much in common and might even be considered as identical with the best of free enterprise capitalism and self-management practices, organizations and methods and property incentives, but, instead, at nationalization, bureaucratization, the command economy and Welfare Statism. Menger and Foxwell, although sympathizing with the socialists, do show where and why they went wrong with their premises, “factual” observations, dogmas and conclusions. The book contains many hints of interest to monetary freedom advocates. – Here the error lies probably more in the title and with the translator than with Anton Menger’s work. – J.Z.

MERCURY, THE, international digest, letter of Aug. 28, 1980 by Vince Miller, with appeal for help by J.Z., to get all issues out on microfiche, 1p, in PP 861.

MEREDITH, HELEN, in THE AUTRALIAN, 18 Aug. 87, article on an electronic book development, 1p, in PP 907-910.

MERGERS, PP 724.

MERGERS, See: SHORTT, BRUCE NEVIN, Are Mergers Victimless Crimes? Is Big Bad? 1p, in PP 279: 121. – See also PP 724. – I hold that citizens should make a merger & take-over bid for all remaining assets in government hands, to get them finally under their own control and management, in a capitalistic or cooperative way, as they please, within their own voluntary and autonomous associations. The government is certainly under- performing and wasting many of OUR remaining public assets. Piecemeal privatization does not help much and rather puts more money into the hands of bureaucrats and politicians than our own. The government is our greatest debtor – and one that does not pay us, in balance, but rather taxes us, on and on, more and more, while holding on and continuing to mismanage huge public assets. How can we put up with it? How can we stop it? See PP 19C. In such a merger, if well planned and run, governments could come to disappear – for all but voluntary statists. – As it is, we are all more or less and INVOLUNTARILY merged with numerous government “anti-enterprises”. – A citizen-run take-over bid, for the assets now controlled by bureaucrats and politicians, could bring every Australian ca. $1 million in certified and transferable assets. – And still they remain apathetic towards this option. Not enough imagination! – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MESTRE, ACHILLE & JAMES, EMILE, La Clause – Or, en droit francais, 1926, 176pp, in PP 25. This may also be considered as a history of monetary despotism, and especially of “legal tender” in France. With a recommendation by Ulrich von Beckerath. As far as the possession of gold and gold clauses are involved, the French seem to have preserved their rights, officially or unofficially, better than most other poeple. Alas, they, too, are still very far from being monetarily fully emancipated, even if at first only in their minds. – J.Z.

MEULEN, HENRY, Free Banking, a short statement of a policy of individualism, 15pp, 24x, in PP 45, 36x, in PP 561.

MEULEN, HENRY, Free Banking, an outline of a policy of individualism, 1934 revised edition (formerly published 1917, entitled: Industrial Justice through Banking Reform), indexed, 429pp, in PP 796. With a warning against this book by Ulrich von Beckerath, 7 April 1968, my own index notes to this book and appeals to help me in getting Meulen’s case, all his relevant correspondence, all his and previous issues of THE INDIVIDUALIST, LONDON, complete at least on microfilm. PP 796.

MEULEN, HENRY, Henry Meulen speaking or: Peace through Enlightenment on Individualism, 6pp, edited by John Zube, 24x, in PP 12. – Most of his books ended up in the hands of GOVERNMENT librarians & he destroyed most of his correspondence! To that extent he was still a statist and self-destructive. – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MEULEN, HENRY, Index to THE INDIVIDUALIST, 1937-76, with some additions by John Zube, in PP 561.

MIC: MICRO INFORMATION CONCEPTS, some of their 1984 introductory leaflets, catalogues, letters and offers, 69pp, 48x, in PP 647. – It is defunct, possibly because it was over-optimistic and had spent too much on fruitless advertising. What happened to its collection? – J.Z.

MICKLETHWAIT, BRIAN, 5,000,000,000 good reasons to donate a monthly standing order to the L.A., 1p: 115, in PP 1487. – The L.A. should offer its output, in alternative and affordable media, as a growing libertarian encyclopaedia and charge a subscription for its annual supplements. – Moreover, it should include alphabetized leaflets and essays from other libertarian sources, making such a Freedom Encyclopaedia a project for all libertarian groups and individuals. On paper this would be too expensive. At least it is now putting all its output on the Internet. – J.Z., 17.6.99.

MICKLETHWAIT, BRIAN, Footnotes, … supplying complete…., LA Tactical Notes, 1992, 4pp, LA Tactical Notes No. 11, in PP 1,052 – 1,061. (I would like to have the time and energy for this. As it is, the usefulness of footnotes would anyhow be largely confined to one’s reading opportunities, to the extent that they are used and one wants to made use of a reference. These are still all too limited. Full texts of all relevant articles are still not accessible, nor are full bibliographies compiled or indexes, complete files of ideas, definitions and refutations. And if they were easily accessible to all, then adding references to one’s inevitably limited reading could be anyhow avoided. One’s reference list would look painfully small compared with the total listing. One would then rather concentrate on as much innovative thinking as possible, for which there are as yet no references. Moreover, should one hide behind authority figures? Or should one merely strive for the appearance of a well researched scientific paper? Should one merely appeal to those who would be impressed by authority figures agreeing with one’s views? Many academics like to play that game. I was never very much impressed by it. Rather than having a single article somehow cross referenced, I would like to see many steps taken towards having e.g. all freedom knowledge totally cross-referenced. J.Z., 11.2.93.)

MICKLETHWAIT, BRIAN, People – not the Government – Should Decide what Marriage Means, 96, 2pp, in PP 1334/35: 187. – Not THE people, but, rather, each couple or group for itself! Free choice of contracts, here, too. But they should be held to their responsibilities for their children, unless they contract other arrangements for them – within THEIR voluntary communities! – J.Z.

MICKLETHWAIT, BRIAN, Some Advice to Czecho-Slovakia about how to Do Capitalism, 1992, 2pp, LA Economic Notes No. 45, in PP 1,052 – 1,061. – I would say start with laissez faire in money and with all other presently monopolized government services, but only for volunteers. Full exterritorial autonomy for their experiments and freedom of action. That would also solve the minority problems, which have already led there and elsewhere to many armed clashes. And the realization of this and all other tolerant ideals is simple: Permit individual secession and re-association. See the On Panarchy series. A whole country, i.e. its whole population, cannot be enlightened at once but one should clearly give the ultimate go-ahead to all creative people already somewhat enlightened, in a way that does not directly provoke and threaten the reactionaries, the traditionalists and others, like “progressive radicals”, who would want to remain to live and suffer under the present or their self-chosen systems. That means, fully free enterprise in everything – at the own expense and risk but only for those who want it, and to the extent that they want it. We do not prescribe a uniform scientific, technological, cultural or religious constitution, law, policy, administration or jurisdiction upon all, no matter how progressive it might objectively be. Why continue to insist on such a traditional idiocy in politics and economics? Not even any degree of freedom should be imposed upon dissenters – as far as their own relationships are concerned. Even in the West abuses are still blamed on supposedly too much liberty. That will occur much more so, for some time to come, in the East. Softly does it. Even among self-professed libertarians and anarchists some degrees of enlightenment are very hard to spread. Let each dance to the music he hears, with his chosen partners. However, I do welcome any freedom programmes for other countries, however belatedly they are supplied, but especially those which do not insist on the continuance of any territorial frontiers. For freedom lovers their decisive borders should be their own skins and those of others. There should have been many such programmes proposed, for Czecho-Slovakia and other countries, at least since 1938 and a much greater interest should have been shown for the varied victims than that expressed merely by conventional anti-communism, which “intellectually” and militarily wanted to “resist” or “liberate” with nuclear weapons and thus drove many of the victims into the arms of their very oppressors. J.Z., 11.2.93. – If I could not add some comments, this listing would be too boring for me and possibly for most of my few readers, too. – J.Z., 8.1.94. If you want to add comments, to my listing or on LMP fiche, please do so. – Talking amd writing about freedom and reading and publishing freedom texts, cheaply and permanently on alternative media is, probably, at present the most important important freedom ACTION required of all of us. – J.Z., 17.6.99.

MICKLETHWAIT, BRIAN, Why Guns Should not Be Illegal, 95, 2p, in PP 1334/35: 161. – Those in the hands of territorial nation States, violent criminals, mental cases, drug addicts and of all organizations suppressing individual rights, should be illegal or outlawed, by rights. Only genuine individual rights are associated with the authority to enforce them. – J.Z., 30.9.97.

MICKLETHWAIT, BRIAN, Why I Support the Contras, 4pp, L.A., 29x, in PP 864. – I support SOME of their aims and disagree with SOME of their methods, as I do for most other and somewhat genuine freedom fighters. – J.Z.

MICROFICHE FOR YOU, PP 637. Never Could so Few do so Much with so Little for so Many or: Am I just raving on about my hobby-horse: LMP? 2pp in PP 668. MICROFICHE COLUMNS & ROWS that are possible at various reduction rates, PP 685. Prior catalogs e.g. in PP 647, 759, 868, 1022. Advice on reading machines: PP 649. See also Koman’s fiche, Publish Your Own Book, for under $ 50, available from LMP, for $ 1, while my stock lasts. LMP Money pamphlet, a 24 pp introduction, PP 22 & 736. LMP & CIS compared, PP 685. LMP and Harper & Row compared, PP 685. Some introductory notes, PP 27-28. German introduction, PP 401. Contents listings from each issue, for up to 758 in 760/65. Listing by numbers to PP 1157 in PP 1172/73.

MICROFICHE READING MACHINES, cheap and home built, see LIVING FREE, for Jim Stumm’s design, on pages 348/9 in PP 708, and the article under YOB, PARRY C., from PHOTOGRAPHIC, U.S.A., Nov. 75, reproduced in PP 907-910.

MICROFICHE READING MACHINES, HOME-MADE, PP 618, 708.

MICROFICHE READING MACHINES, small and portable, I found interesting, useful or excellent, by John Zube, 1986, 147 pp, 36x, in PP 649.

MICROFILM PUBLISHERS OTHER THAN LMP, OFFERING SIMILAR OR RELATED COLLECTIONS, 15pp, in PP 1508/1509, pages 852-866.

MICROFILMING FOR FREEDOM LOVERS, An A-Z Compilation of Facts, Opinions and Proposals. Short first version in 907/10. (Remains to be integrated with 2 other such files and expanded, perhaps into a book. J.Z.)

MICROFORM INTERNATIONAL MARKETING CORPORATION, a leaflet, 1p, 29x, in PP 367 & 426. I have not got a single sale through that international corporation as yet, or through any other that I was in touch with as far as I can remember. If I could outdo large corporations in this respect, many other individuals and small cooperative and partnership groups could, too, in many if not all respects. – J.Z.

MICROFORMAT SYSTEMS, 2pp on its conversion offer from roll film to fiche, in PP 907-910.

MICROPATROLOGICAL SOCIETY of Christopher Martin, letter by J.Zube, enquiring in vain on its and his fate, May 14,87. (Has anyone information on either? It was an attempt to confederate the mini-states and individual secessionists and more attempts like this should be made. J.Z.) 1p, 29x, in PP 689.

MIDDLE EAST, See: ROTHBARD, MURRAY N., Reflections on the Middle East, 3pp, in PP 1312/1314: 121. Alas, he discusses only the difficulties of territorial statism, not the solution of exterritorial autonomy for all parties. – J.Z.

MIDDLE EAST, See: ROYCE, E. SCOTT, Terrorism & Mideast Policy, 2pp, in PP 1404/06: 71. – Terrorism is tied to territorialism & would tend to die out with it. But this aspect of terrorism is almost never discussed by the anti-terrorists or the terrorists and those who sympathize with them. So many of the most important topics are generally avoided, even by those who consider themselves to be “radicals”. – J.Z.

MIDDLETON, E.P. review, A Time for Truth, by William E. Simon, 5pp, 1980, 29x, in PP 631.

MIDDLETON, E.P., Alternative Revenue, 1983, 17pp, 29x, in PP 528.

MIDDLETON, E.P., The Great Australian Myth of Home Ownership, 1983, 12pp, 29x, in PP 528.

MIDNIGHT ECONOMIST, The Radio Scripts of William R. Allen, Oct/Nov. 90 sample, only one on hand, 6pp, in PP 1139. What fraction is reached by midnight broadcasts or small newsletters? Broadcasts are even more temporary media than newspapers and weekly magazines are. How much more fruitful could a central or networked information service be, which supplied only wanted and specific information, on microfiche, on disks, on line, on telephone, on audio or video tape, on fax, on photocopies, in computer print-outs, as cheaply as the medium would allow? Do we have a real market for ideas, arguments, facts and talents until such an information centre or network is established? Compare PP 182 and 20/21. – J.Z.

MIELORDT, SVEN, Tachyonenenergie, Hyperenergie, Antigravitation, 1984, 572pp, mostly in German, partly in English, especially the patent descriptions, 29x, PP 692/693. – Too much was promised, based upon a fraudulent “scientific” report, whose fraudulence S.M. discovered too late. – But this survey is still interesting to some. Unfortunately, the quality of some of the photocopies that he used here leaves much to be desired. – J.Z.

MIESES, STANLEY, The Blaring of the Zines, 1989, 1p, on alternative small presses, as represented by FACTSHEET FIVE, in PP 1158. I have not yet seen a sample under the new editorship, J.Z.

MILES, PERRY & ANDERSON, JACK, 10 human rights points from their 1971 work: A Constitution for a Moral Government, 48x, in PP 589/590. – I want to get in touch with them but so far asked dozens of libertarians in vain. – J.Z. See: ANDERSON, JACK.

MILITIA, Historical Model for the Organization of an International Militia or Police Force, quoting Macaulay on Cromwell’s “Ironsides”, PP 1 & 2.

MILITIA, Organization of Militias for the protection of human rights and the establishment of world peace – and their conduct and programme in war and peace, 73pp, 1962, in PP 61-63. See also under Defence.

MILITIA, See: CASTLEMAN, HARVEY N., The Texas Rangers. The Story of an Organization that Is Unique, like nothing else in America, 1944, 24pp, Haldeman – Julius Publications, no series no, in PP 1218. Alas, not an ideal militia, either. – J.Z.

MILITIA, See: KUENZLI, FREDERICK A., Right and Duty or Citizen and Soldier, Switzerland, Prepared and at Peace, A Model for the U.S., National Defence Institute, N.Y.C., 1916, ca. 250pp, in 1070. Only extensive study of the Swiss militia system that I have so far come across. – J.Z.

MILITIA, See: MARINA, WILLIAM, Militia, Standing Armies, and the Second Amendment: Some Perspectives from the American Revolution, 4pp, in PP 1153.

MILITIA, See: SHARP, GRANVILLE.

MILITIA, See: SURO, ROBERTO, Tyrol politics turns violent, 1p clipping, 1986, on the survival of the home guard or militia of Tyrol, in PP 1078.

MILITIA, Warfare as Conducted by an Ideal Militia, A Kind of Military Jiu Jitsu, Radical Liberation & Revolution – with the aid of the conscripts of the enemy regime, PP 61-63.

MILLER, VINCENT H, Libertarian spirit spreading worldwide, 1p, in PP 1382/85: 287. – Alas, it has not spread to my surroundings as yet and, apart from me, few have sufficiently tried to spread it micrographically, i.e. on a tiny but shiny and very productive path. – However, Vince entrusts much of his output to LMP, rather than doing it himself or getting it done by a commercial agency nearby. – I wish he would use microfiche for his planned large international directory – before it gets outdated, while waiting for the finance to print it on paper. – J.Z.

MILLER, VINCENT H., A Magazine Adventure…., Editorial, 2pp: 4, and x other editorials, here not listed if they are not articles, in PP 1506/07. – He was involved with several libertarian periodicals (e.g. FREE WORLD CHRONICLE), many of them now unobtainable in their back issues. What I could get, I fiched. See: ISIL. – J.Z.

MILLER, VINCENT H., America at Critical Crossroads, 2pp, in PP 1287/89p329. Alas, only on geographical secessionism. (Only a few can be interested in this form. Potentially all can be interested in non-geographical secessionism, even if their attitude is merely: “Wonderful! This way we get rid of the bastards, without further trouble and without getting our hands dirty! They will, from then on, have enough trouble with attempts to realize their utopias among themselves, to remain any threat or trouble us.” – Geographical separatism IS the CRITICAL PROBLEM! – at any size beyond private, cooperative or corporative property. – But among thousands of libertarian and anarchist publications PEACE PLANS stands almost alone on this. – J.Z.)

MILLER, VINCENT H., Is a Breakup of Canada Invitable? 1p, in PP 1287/89p408. – Would you like to see internal custom barriers, pass ports, quotas, exchange regulations, and still more different nationalistic and cultural regulations? – A collectivistic and territorial breakup is just not good enough. It might even lead to more civil wars and oppression. – J.Z.

MILLER, VINCENT H., People who Live in Glass Houses…, 3pp, in PP 1445: 134.

MILLER, VINCENT H., Radio Free America, 5pp: 70, in PP 1506/07.

MILLER, VINCENT H., Revolution in the Americas. A Time for restructuring, 1p, in PP 1287/89p467.

MILLER, VINCENT H., Roger MacBride – A Remembrance, 2pp, in PP 1287/89p479. (March 5, 1995). The best memorial for all the great freedom people would be to finally put out all their freedom writings, permanently and cheaply, at least on microfiche. But I see no one else but me move into that direction. – He owned copyrights to Rose Wilder Lane’s freedom writings. Who holds them now? – J.Z.

MILLER, VINCENT H., Sic Transit Canada, 5pp: 193, in PP 1506/07.

MILLER, VINCENT H., The Fraser Institute, 4pp: 267, in PP 1506/07.

MILLER, VINCENT H., WACO : America’s Shame, 2pp, in PP 1287/89p287.

MILLER, VINCENT H., We Can Save America, 3pp, in PP 1287/89p355.

MILLER, VINCENT H., World Famine – A Political Phenomenon? 3pp, in OPTION, in PP 1,028/29. – Lack of time, money and of faith in the open-mindedness of most ISIL members towards their microfiche options, have so far prevented me from attending the international ISIL conferences. – I would have liked to make it to Berlin, in August 98, but my finances do not, presently, permit it. If I were to get 2 or 3 orders for the whole LMP set from some ISIL members, then I would be able to attend. Small hope! So I rather go on “fiching” on my own than rap with ISIL members. But it was nice to have met Miller & Elwood, several times, in 1991, at Forum Books, when it was still open. – Both are so busy in promoting liberty, in conventional ways, that they have no time and energy left to explore the time, funds and energy saving options of alternative media, like microfiche, for themselves, and to recommend them to others, although most of their support comes from countries in which members can even less afford to get freedom writings in print on paper. Donations of paper literature from the West are woefully inadequate, from stocks that are already insufficient for the West. On fiche, floppies & CD-ROMs ISIL, producing only upon demand, could offer whole freedom libraries instead, in any desired segment, very cheaply. Those who could not even afford the often VERY cheap used reading machines, could build one of their own, as e.g. JIM STUMM did. He printed a plan for his construction and I fiched another such blueprint as well. Will I ever get this message across – and would ISIL get it across to its members or will they all remain paper addicts? – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MILLIONAIRES, Hooray for all those 25, 661 Millionaires, 724. By properly expropriating the bureaucracy, there could be 17 million Millionaires in Australia alone. See 19 C. – J.Z.

MILLIONAIRES, WANTED: MORE, RUSSELL, DEAN, Wanted More Millionaires, 5pp, in PP 957. – In State assets Australians already are, although nor in certified and transferable form. See PP 19C. The bureaucrats and polticians hold, control and mismanage them “for them”, never paying dividends or declaring themselves bankrupt. – Through honest and productive old age insurance investments almost everybody could be. Governments prevent us from becoming rich, in many ways. Once enough citizens are made to realize this, they will soon be on the way towards self-liberation. – J.Z.

MILTON, JOHN, A Treatise of Civil Power in Ecclesiastical Causes: Shewing that it is not lawful for any power on earth to compel in matters of religion, 1659, 33pp, 24x, in PP 223.

MILTON, JOHN, Areopagitica : A Speech for the Liberty of Unlicenced Printing, to the Parliament of England, 1644, 49pp, 24x, in PP 223.

MILTON, JOHN, Meditations upon Divine Justice and the Death of King Charles I, 12pp, 24x, in PP 223.

MILTON, JOHN, Six Political Essays, selected by John Zube, 223pp, 24x, in PP 223.

MILTON, JOHN, The Ready and Easy Way to Establish A FREE COMMONWEALTH and the Excellence Thereof, compared with the inconveniences and dangers of readmitting kingship in this nation, 32pp, 24x, in PP 223.

MILTON, JOHN, The Second Defence of the People of England against an anonymous libel, entitled: “The Royal Blood Crying to Heaven for Vengeance on the English Parricides”, translated from the Latin by Robert Fellows, SELECTED PASSAGES only, 36pp, 24x, in PP 223. (I would rather film the whole text, if I had it, together with the Latin original. – J.Z.)

MILTON, JOHN, The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates, proving that it is lawful, and hath been held so through all ages, for any, who have the power, to call to account a tyrant, or wicked king, and after due convictions, to depose, and put him to death; if the ordinary magistrate have neglected, or denied to do it. And that they who of late so much blame deposing, are the men that did it themselves, 2nd. ed., 1650, 45pp, 24x, in PP 223. – Has Milton written anything else that I should fiche here? – J.Z.

MINIMAL GOVERNMENT, See LIMITED GOVERNMENT. – The ONLY SAFE minimal governments and tax burdens are the ones reduced to ZERO! – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MINIMUM WAGE, MAXIMUM UNEMPLOYMENT, Editorial, NORTHWEST LIBERTARIAN, 1/2p, in PP 493. – There are OTHER and even MORE IMPORTANT factors that make for prolonged mass unemployment. See especially under Monetary Despotism vs. Monetary Freedom. – J.Z., 7.6.98.

MINIMUM WAGES, See: TIER, MARK, Jobs for Everyone – without Minimum Wage Laws, 6pp, in PP 1445: 70. – Minimum wages existed before and after mass unemployment. They just make matters worse but are not the only or even major factor. Whoever can’t sell his goods or services won’t hire or retain employees, not even at free market rates of wages and salaries (if these were possible under monetary despotism, an assumption I would not make). – Libertarians, too, fall often for single hypothesis “explanations”, without sufficiently examining the multiple hypotheses already advanced. In this sphere they do this although they can no longer simply assume, after numerous monetary freedom writings have been published in recent years, that monetary despotism has no effect upon employment. – The monopoly of exchange media in an exchange economy, must significantly affect the exchange of labour for goods, services and other labour. But there is no single official study of this relationship in Australia. In the U.S. at least some Federal Reserve Bank reports have published some critical studies. – J.Z., 24.9.97.

MINORITY AUTONOMY, See: UNPO NEWS, Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization’s Official Quarterly Publication, sample, III/7, Jan.-Apr.96, 20pp, in PP 1358. – Alas, still without a trace of panarchism! A voluntaristic and exterritorialistic autonomy programme for all minority groups and communities could sufficiently unite or federate them for effective publicity and other actions. So far, their territorialist ambitions are still part of the problem rather than the solution. Moreover, they remain quite uninformed about this defect in their thinking and unwilling to learn about it. They are still only at the stage where religious dissenters and nonconformists were, when they merely demanded separate territories for themselves, instead of religious tolerance or religious liberty. – At best they put it, like some Tamil freedom fighters once did at a Humanist Society discussion in Sydney, into the category of unrealistic and utopian thinking. These “realists” ignore centuries, if not thousands of years of personal law, capitulations, religious tolerance and consular jurisdiction traditions, as well as current practices in natural sciences, technology & lifestyles. – According to a recent newspaper report the Tamils have provided some rather popular parallel institutions, including courts, in areas liberated by them. PEACE PLANS is probably still the only publication that takes a realistic view of this option. See especially my ON PANARCHY subseries. – Ron Hubbard, the SF writer & founder of “scientology” wrote of brains being programmed by “engrams” and in need of de- or re-programming. Previously, one spoke of “fixed ideas”. Beckerath pointed out this phenomenon with an analogy: It is as if people would first have to grow new brain cells for new ideas. – Quoting him merely from memory. That seems to take forever with some. – J.Z.

MINUS ONE, An independent anarchist Review, London, 1964 – 1980, published by S. E. PARKER, incomplete, 519pp, with various inserts, in PP 1420/22: 1-519. Nos. 2; 9 – 17 (17 is incomplete! Later, complete, in PP 1465.); 18 -21; (22 now in PP 1465.) 23 – 33; 34 (incomplete); 35 – 38 (No. 38 was first called EGO, No. 1); 39 – 44. INSERTS : John Zube to S.E. Parker, 1.1.66, 3pp: sheets 139 ff; S.E. Parker to Mike Coughlin, THE DANDELION, Summer 1978, & a note on MINUS ONE in PEACE NEWS, 5 July 1974: 142. – Because of the imperfections of its duplication or print and because my set remained incomplete, even after I met with S.E. Parker twice, & got only a few copies from others, like Robert Sagehorn, Mike Coughlin and Jack Grancharoff, I had long postponed fiching this anarchist periodical. But now my computers were down for a while and so I engaged in the laborious chore of hand corrections to make the text more legible where needed. – If you want to obtain a complete set, at least on microfiche, you will have to help me with the issues in your possession or within your reach. I have a few original copies in duplicate and could photocopy others for you – in exchange for copies missing in my set. I would in all cases be satisfied with good photocopies. – While I favour individualist anarchism, too, I only want to help realize it within a panarchist framework, i.e., for my kind of individualist anarchists only and this only on the basis of exterritorial autonomy for all voluntary communities or free exchange societies. I do not fully subscribe to the Stirner, Tucker, Mackay, Solneman & Parker versions of it but want all their writings cheaply, easily and fully accessible, too. – An archive on individualist anarchism has been planned in Berlin, largely based on material left by my father, K.H. Zube (Solneman), but has not made much progress yet, as far as I know. – The Mackay Gesellschaft in Germany has been revived by Uwe Timm, with its own publication, separately reproduced by LMP. – Some articles in “MINUS ONE”, are separately listed. – J.Z.

MINUS ONE, Nos. 17, Jan/Feb 1967 & 22, June 1968, 27pp: 36-62, in PP 1465. – I acquired these two issues from the libray of Jack Grancharoff, after I had already compiled my incomplete set for microfiching. – J.Z.

MISES, LUDWIG von, Bibliography, compiled by Bettina Bien (Greaves), FEE, 1969, 60pp, in PP 988. – In 1990 she was working on the final bibliography of Mises’ writings. It came out in 2 thick volumes! – I would like to fiche both of them, too. – J.Z.

MISES, LUDWIG von, Gold, 3pp, reprinted from THE FREEMAN, June 1965: 547, in PP 1457/62. – Discusses only gold redemptionism not gold clearing or gold accounting standards based on gold weight units. To that extent Mises was still hundreds of years behind in evaluating gold standard options. Gold or silver for clearing or accounting only, instead of redemption, is an ancient option and practice. – J.Z.

MISES, LUDWIG von, On the Manipulation of Money and Credit, with an introduction and epilogue by Percy L. Greaves, Jr., translated by Bettina Bien Greaves and ed. by Percy L. Greaves, Jr., as authorized by Mises, and with some unauthorized notes by J.Z., with name index and subject index, 1978, 350pp, in PP 1168. – 2pp review by Israel Kirzner, in PP 1247.

MISES, LUDWIG von, The Master of Economics and fearless champion of freedom, 1p, from SUNDAY INDEPENDENT, June 28, 1981, in PP 1,019. Some libertarians proposed, after the death of Mises, that he should be elected president and decide and act on the basis of all of his writings. If only those fans of his had at least gone ahead and compiled all this writings and fully indexed them as the Mises Encyclopaedia for Liberty. At least they themselves could have learned much more from such an effort. Some other libertarian writers deserve such treatment, too, and at last all writings by all of them should become collected, available and indexed, abstracted reviews and combined in general and special bibliographies. No one who does not work towards such an aim, at least to some extent, does truly LOVE liberty ideas, arguments, facts, proposals and options. – J.Z. – Anyhow, anyone’s wisdom or foolishness could serve in presidential position for any volunteer community that is only exterritorially autonomous. To the shame of the libertarian and anarchist movements, they have not yet put their kinds of wisdom together and made them easily and cheaply accessible. – J.Z., 17.6.99.

MISES, LUDWIG von, The Trade Cycle, 1951, 2pp: 72, in PP 1480. – There are dozens of crisis theories. Mises pushed his own while replying only to a few of the others. Most of them accept unquestioningly monetary despotism. Even many Austrians economists favour an exclusive gold standard and 100 % covered gold certificates and still attack the real bills doctrine. But would there be ANY trade cycles under full economic freedom? I doubt it. – J.Z., 19.5.98.

MOCILNIK, KRISTIAN an ZUBE, JOHN, 30.9.93, 2 S., in PP 1329: 117. – I could not read or understand every word of his handwriting. So I did not attempt a transcription. It takes all kinds to make a world. – J.Z.

MOLEX, Products for Micrographics and Information handling, leaflets, 13pp, in PP 907-910. – If you want to compile the individual frames on your own fiche yourself, & update them, these are the people to contact. They supply special sticky sheets for arranging the master fiche yourself. I rather get the fiche produced automatically and refilmed if necessary, through an automated and efficient micrographic agency. But if you want fancy page arrangements and want to use many different formats on the same fiche, this may be the way to go, for you. It is also a way to update fiche masters without refilming the lot. J.Z.)

MOLINARI, GUSTAVE de, Les Soirees de la Rue Saint-Lazare – Entretiens sur LES LOIS ECONOMIQUES et defense de la propriete, 1849, 363pp, 24x, in PP 141-144. Also 367pp, in PP 1088. (Once again, through my flawed cataloguing and memory, I managed to reproduce a title twice. I guess that does not happen often to a conventional publisher. However, my loss in time and money is relatively small. I have not checked yet which of the two editions is the better one. The one-fiche edition is for both of us certainly the cheaper one. Until about PP 182 I did not strive as much for high density of pages on a fiche. My lists are also incomplete and late and sometimes I forget what I have already done, some time ago. – J.Z.)

MONDRAGON, See: MOLNER, TERRY, The Third Way Is Here. Neither capitalist nor socialist. Japan and Mondragon are a different kind of nation, IN CONTEXT, No. 19, n.d., 87 or later, 6pp, in PP 1240. – See also PP 1049.

MONETARISM, PP 815.

MONETARY CONCEPT OF HISTORY, See: PP 11: Revisionism on the French Revolution, at the end of the book by Ulrich von Beckerath.

MONETARY FREEDOM HANDBOOK, Project. Listing of terms that it should deal with : 740. Compare the index to PP 9-11 in 11. Compare the Index to Henry Meulen’s THE INDIVIDUALIST, the index to Tucker’s LIBERTY, the index to 61/63, and the indexes in some of the monetary freedom titles listed and filmed. An individual can only provide a pilot scheme. There are still many titles I have only heard of and never as yet seen. So how could I review them for such a handbook? And the material collected and filmed by me is already too large to be comprehensively indexed and abstracted and reviewed in a handbook, by myself alone. So any help is wanted and needed for this project, preferably in filmable print-outs & on ASCII disks. There are periods in the breakdown of empires and satellites and during civil wars and revolutions, where the existing monetary despotism could simply be ignored by people sufficiently informed on the monetary freedom options and technologies. Most of the required knowledge does already exist – but is still all too wide dispersed, to make a successful monetary freedom revolution not only possible but likely. – J.Z.

MONETARY FREEDOM! – NEWSLETTER – AND …M I C R O F I C H E, Some initial notes, by John Zube, in pages 67, 139, 141, 144 in PP 913. No.1, Nov. 86, 6pp, 36x, in PP 736, 29x, in PP 708 & 731. – First 4 issues, Nov. 86 to Feb. 89, 24pp, 29x, in PP 867. A subscription to 4 issues, $ 8 ord. mail, $ 10 airmail, entitled to the subscriber’s choice of 8 monetary freedom or other microfiche offered by LMP. I have not bothered to put together another issue because there were so few subscribers. The one or two who have paid in advance can claim their value in my microfiche. After No. 4, I suspended further such issues but may take them up again if sufficient interest is shown. Otherwise, all such material will be offered only on fiche. I had hoped to draw up to 100 subscribers for such a newsletter and wanted then to pass the editing and publishing to someone else. An Obituary, or, No. 5, as a “free” supplement”, 12pp, in PP 1182. Also in PP 1195. – However, the microfiched monetary freedom and free banking series goes on and on! – J.Z.

MONETARY FREEDOM, See: UNWIN, J.D., Our Economic Problems and their Solution, 1944, 148pp, an extract from “Hopousia”, but rearranged, in PP 1398: 1. – It advocates some monetary freedom and has been all too long out of print, although the number of unemployed and underemployed has by now reached 1 billion! But so far not even one in a million of these victims shows a serious interest in monetary despotism as the main cause and in monetary freedom as the main cure. – J.Z.

MONETARY LEGISLATION, H.R. 516, 101st Congress, 1st Session, Congressman Crane’s bill to authorize the Treasury to issue gold-backed bonds to the holders of accounts in federally insured financial institutions that are insolvent, 1p, in PP 1240. – Even that would not change their inherently wrongful nature as “investments” in tax slaves. – J.Z.

MONETARY LEGISLATION, H.R. 843, 101st Congress, 1st Session, Congressman Crane’s bill to provide that all federal Reserve notes and other currencies of the U.S. shall be redeemable in gold, 1p, in PP 1240. – That would introduce just another kind of exclusive and forced currency or monetary despotism rather than monetary freedom. – J.Z.

MONOPOLIES, THE MYTH OF MONOPOLY POWER, PP 290. (I hold that there are very powerful legal monopolies but, apart from some “natural monopolies”, no powerful private monopolies without government sanction and support. Naturally, you own yourself. That is a monopoly, too. And you have a moral monopoly on your own property and earnings. – J.Z.)

MONT PELERIN SOCIETY, THE, Prospectus for Pacific Regional Meeting, Sydney, August 85, 7pp, 29x, in PP 564. – It seems to have kept its papers well out of print and out of microfiche. I only saw some of them once, in London 1984. For a fraction of the costs of one meeting, they could get all of their papers permanently available on microfiche. – J.Z.

MONTGOMERY, ZACH., Poison Drops in the Federal Senate. THE SCHOOL QUESTION from a Parental and Non-Sectarian Stand-Point. An Epitome of the Educational Views of Zach Montgomery, compiled by himself from the U.S. Census Reports and from his own writings, 4th ed., 1889, 138pp. – This work was in 1972 reproduced in “The Right Wing Individualist Tradition in America”, ed. by Murray N. Rothbard & Jerome Tuccille, Arno Press & The New York Times, N.Y., 1972, in PP 1416: 92.

MORDELL, ALBERT, Sham-Smashers At Work. A Study of the Aims and Methods of Haldeman-Julius’ Monthly and the Debunker, 1950, 48pp, in PP 1212.

MORDELL, ALBERT, Trailing E. Haldeman-Julius in Philadelphia and other Places. The early years of an author, editor and publisher who has done much to spread sound ideas on controversial topics, 1949, 66pp, series B-834, in PP 1213: Total: 433pp.

MORE, MAX, The Extropian Principles, 6pp introduction to EXTROPY, an optimistic libertarian futurist publication, which I would like to film if I could get all the copies and permission for filming. – J.Z. In PP 974.

MORE, THOMAS in Utopia: OF WARFARE, translation of this chapter by Ralph Robinson, 1937, 17pp, 29x, in PP 404.

MORLEY, FELIX, State and Society, IHS, 1978, 26pp, in PP 1424: 118. – This is from chapter 5 of his 1949 book: “The Power in the People”. – Frank Chodorov wrote a book on State and Society: “The Rise and Fall of Society”, The Devin-Adair Co., 1959, 168pp. After many years of book searching in bookshops, I did finally manage to get a copy of it. To me it seems to be a classic work on the subject & I extracted many “slogans for liberty” from it. I would like to reproduce this book, too, if I could get the reproduction permission. Alas, according to some correspondence with its publisher, even they seem to be in some doubt about whether some of their titles are o.o.p. or not. Some were asserted to be in print still, although they were not listed in their literature list. Moreover, as usual, they are not prepared to bring out their o.o.p. titles on microfiche or allow others to do so. – What can the cause of freedom do with such friends? – J.Z., 11.9.97.

MORLEY, FELIX, State and Society, IHS, 1978, 27pp, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1199p279, headed: State and Society.

MORLEY, FELIX, The Design of Freedom, 10pp, 1961, in PP 1,015.

MORLEY, JOHN, Burke, in the series English Men of Letters, edited by John Morley, 1980, 9th thousand impression, 216pp, in PP 1065.

MOSQUITOS, See: PHELAN, AMANDA, Dealing with mozzies just takes a little common scent, SMH 29.12.97, 1p: in PP 1493. – On LEPTOSPERMUM LIVERSIDGEI, known as the mozzie blocker plant: 115, in PP 1493.- ROBSON, FRANK, Once bitten… , SMH 23.8.97, on mosquitos and ROSS RIVER FEVER, 4pp: 116, in PP 1493. – What doctors often do not know, do not tell or do not care about, should be compiled to fill xyz databases and reference works. How many diseases are transmitted by mosquitoes, flies, fleas etc.? Yet many doctors would still absolutely deny that e.g. AIDS could be so transmitted, although a few % of the cases of this infection remain unexplained. – J.Z., 1.1.98.

MOSS, LAURENCE S., The Power Elite Revisited, 7pp, in PP 984.

MOSSE, CLAUDE, Comment s’elabore un myth politique: Solon, ‘pere fondateur’ de la democratie athenienne. (The Development of a Political Myth: Solon, Founding Father of Athenian Democracy.).

MOST, JOHANN, Beast and Monster. The Beast of Property, The Social Monster, 2 essays on anarchism, a reprint by Fred Woodworth of THE MATCH, 16pp, in PP 882.

MUELLER, KARL von, has produced his first few microfiche. They are still somewhat imperfect, but then my first ones were far from perfect, too, at least with regard to the reduction rate and the number of pages they contained. Direct all your enquiries and orders to him, not to me. I have only samples of his output on hand so far. Address: KARL VON MUELLER, EXANIMO PRESS, P.O. BOX 18, SEGUNDO, CO 81070, USA. His titles: EXANIMO 1: Karl von Mueller, Vibrating Gold Concentrator, 49pp, 1 fiche, EXANIMO 2: Tron Miller, Gold Rocker Handbook, 40pp, 1 fiche, EXAMIMO 3: Karl von Mueller, The Coinshooters Manual, 48pp, 1 fiche, EXANIMO 4: Warren Merkitch, The Beachcomber’s Handbook, 48pp, 1 fiche, EXANIMO 5, Deek Gladson, Treasure of the Valley of Secrets, 37pp, 1 fiche, Exanimo 6 (?, unmarked as such!) CoC-1, Small Business Legal Handbook, 272pp, on 5 fiche, EXANIMO 7, Gold Dredger’s Handbook I, 45pp, sideways! on 1 fiche, EXANIMO 8, Gold Dredger’s Handbook, II, by Karl von Mueller, 48pp, on 1 fiche, EXANIMO 9, Legal Unlicensed Radio Broadcast Stations, 40pp, on 1 fiche, EXANIMO 10, R.J. Santschi, Modern Divining Rods, 69pp, sideways! on 1 fiche. Prices unknown. Why should I bother to list other libertarians, who so far produced even less on fiche and mostly of less quality, too? When they have a number of quality fiche to offer, I will gladly list them, too. An effort like the production of a single fiche hardly deserves much praise. And those who produced a dozen should not expect to conquer the world with them – unless there are hundreds to thousands like them, and they do run at least a common listing. – J.Z.

MUELLER, MILTON, Affirmative Action: Quota to End all Quotas? 4pp, Jan. 79, from THE LIBERTARIAN REVIEW, in PP 1234. I hold that all back issues of this journal ought to be made cheaply accessible on microfiche. I hold quite a few issues but not the complete set. All book reviews of all libertarian books should be made easily accessible. I would also love to see, for each important book, not only a compilation of its published reviews but also of most of the other discussions of it, reproduced at least on microfiche. J.Z.

MUIR, ANDRES, in TC, No. 149, of 24 July 87, on CYGNUS bulletin board, page 511, in PP 907-910. (Are there libertarian bulletin boards open to submissions on floppies, by mail, from LMP, containing some of its writings and its literature lists? J.Z.)

MULTICULTURALISM, PP 721. It ought to be advanced, from cultural to political, economic and social autonomy, on an exterritorial and voluntary basis. Otherwise it is just another form of more or less democratic or republican imperialism or federalism. As practised now, it amounts rather to compulsory than voluntary integration, since its voluntary segregationism is confined to a narrow view of culture, which excludes e.g. private monies and alternative justice systems. J.Z.

MULTILOG PROJECT OF JAMES KOEHNLINE, PP 907-910. More on this was fiched. See: Koehnline. Perhaps some of those he contacted, and those contacted by Victor Koman, for his MAPA project, could still become micrographically activated? – I tried it with some, in vain re MULTILOG. I have so far no information on the number and the responses of the MAPA project. A mere dozen micrographically active people can already do so much for themselves and for others. The output of hundreds could be listed together and accessed in parts but could no longer be fully read by anyone, during current lifespans. Thus, if you can interest and motivate into micrographic publishing action a mere dozen people, please do so. You could realize Friedrich Schiller’s saying: “How fertile is the smallest circle, if it is well cared for!” – J.Z.

MURPHY, WILLIAM J., Jr., Alexis de Tocqueville in N.Y.: The Formulation of the Egalitarian Thesis, NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY QUARTERLY 61, Jan./April 77, 68-79, summary only, 1p, in LITERATURE OF LIBERTY, in PP 1200p525, headed: DeTocqueville and Equality.

MURRAKUT, TO MOULD THE WORLD, The Story of the Fabians, Options Series, September 1984, by the Australian Adam Smith Club, 20pp, in PP 980. Also in PP 923. – People with a bad memory like mine, tend to repeat their jokes and their other reproductions. – J.Z.

MURRAY, CHARLES, In Pursuit of Happiness and Good Government, here only a 1p review, by OVERVIG, ARLEN, in PP 492.

MURRAY, CHARLES, The American Experience with the Welfare State, 16pp, CIS, in PP 1147.

MURRAY, TOM, Meet the New Alternative to the Post Office – IPSA, an interview with Tom Murray, president of the Independent Postal System of America, in ADVERTISING & SALES PROMOTION, Jan. 1969, 2pp, in PP 1,019.

MUSIC IS BRAINFOOD, See: LLOYD, JAMES, Music Is Brainfood, 1997 clipping, 1p: 92, in PP 1489.

MUSIC, DEVELOPED, PP 199. A Melbourne anarchist (Ian Syms?), who recently has died, told me in 1986 that rock music tends to collectivize the listener and stops thinking while classical music would tend to individualize and stimulate thinking. Has any research been done on this and published? If true, to some extent, then to what degree is such “treatment” effective? Does it differ for each individual? Have we become the puppets of rock musicians? What about folk, country, jazz, etc.? According to a recent radio report, public classical music playing at Bankstown Railway Station (Sydney) has reduced vandalism, hooliganism and mugging there. I would like to hear more about such experiments. – J.Z.

MUSTE, A.J., Getting Rid of War, National Policy and Personal Responsibility, 1959 speech, prepared by him for publication, distributed by American Friends Service Committee, 12pp, in PP 1267. – The close relationship between individual liberties and peace remained unknown to him – and to most other peace writers and activists. – J.Z.

MUSTE, A.J., MEMORIAL INSTITUTE ESSAY SERIES, Nos. 1 – 12, 579pp, in PP 1123. Obviously, most of these essays were written by communists and State socialists rather than libertarians or anarchists. But they contain some libertarian voices. The essays are separately listed by author.

MUSTE, A.J., Portions of Memorandum of April 3, 1942, 5pp, on conscientious objection, in PP 1097.

MUSTE, A.J., Wage Peace Now! The Fellowship of Reconciliation, N.Y., n.d., before or during W.W. II, 31pp, reading list, in PP 1321. I’d rather microfiche more anarchist and libertarian peace writings. Alas, they are still rare. For my own see especially PP 16-18 & 61-63, with the latter, in German, in PP 399 – 401. – J.Z.

MUSTE, ABRAHAM JOHANNES, Who Has the Spiritual Atom Bomb? 1968, 33pp, from the A.J. Muste Memorial Institute Essay Series, in PP 1123. A misleading analogy. The atom bomb is not powerful but merely destructive. Or was he thinking not of spiritual fission but fusion? I find Leonard E. Read’s “Release All Creative Energies!” much more enlightening. and hold that e.g. individual secessionism and exterritorially autonomus panarchies, monetary freedom, tyrannicide, rightful war and peace aims, ideas archives and talent registries, encyclopedias of the best refutations of popular myths errors and prejudices, slogans for liberty compilations, unilateral free trade and propertarian cooperative productive experiments, as well as microfiching, have much to offer in this direction. – J.Z.

MUTUAL CONVENIENCE RELATIONSHIPS vs. SINGLE CONVENIENCE RELATIONSHIPS, PP 390, 865, 987. See Don Werkheiser. (I have the unfinished manuscript of his magnum opus – but have not yet got around to transcribe it. If he had computerized himself, he would probably, by now, have finished it. Some people are glacially slow in adopting micrographics. Some are even slow in adopting PCs. Never mind how bright they are otherwise. J.Z.)

MYCALL SUNANDA UNIVERSITY, World Peace Game, 14pp: 131, in PP 1475. – To run a worthwhile brainstorming session one must have some knowledge, ideas and brains. Otherwise, as in most peace congresses: GIGO. – J.Z.

MYER, RUSSELL, So You Want to Be Your Own Boss? 1p comic, in PP 1271.

MYERS, DAVID MICHAEL, Letter, re: Archy & Anarchy: The state of the debate, by TIBOR R. MACHAN, 1972, 1p: 668, in PP 1457/62.

MYKLEBUST, JOEL B., An Equitarian Analysis of Some Problems for Libertarians, 5pp, in PP 274.

MYKLEBUST, JOEL B., An Equitarian Analysis of some Problems for Libertarians, 5pp, in PP 274: 111.

MYOB, PP 981.

MYOB, See: SUMMER, BRIAN, On Minding One’s Own Business, 1p: 504,in PP 1529-33. – If libertarians really bothered to mind their own business, namely, to make all libertarian knowledge cheaply and easily accessible to anyone interested, they would have long ago adopted some of the alternative media for this. – J.Z.